Panko — Cups to Grams
1 cup panko = 60 grams (vs regular breadcrumbs at 108g — nearly 2×)
1 cup Panko Breadcrumbs = 60 grams
Quick Conversion Table — Panko Breadcrumbs
| Cups | Grams | Tablespoons | Teaspoons |
|---|---|---|---|
| ¼ | 15 g | 4 tbsp | 12 tsp |
| ⅓ | 20 g | 5.33 tbsp | 16 tsp |
| ½ | 30 g | 8 tbsp | 24 tsp |
| ⅔ | 40 g | 10.7 tbsp | 32 tsp |
| ¾ | 45 g | 12 tbsp | 36 tsp |
| 1 | 60 g | 16 tbsp | 48 tsp |
| 1½ | 90 g | 24 tbsp | 72 tsp |
| 2 | 120 g | 32 tbsp | 96 tsp |
| 3 | 180 g | 48 tbsp | 144 tsp |
| 4 | 240 g | 64 tbsp | 192 tsp |
Panko vs Regular Breadcrumbs: Weight Comparison
The density difference between panko and regular breadcrumbs is one of the most misunderstood weight disparities in the kitchen. At 60g per cup, panko weighs just 56% as much as regular fine breadcrumbs (108g per cup). This is not an error — it reflects the genuinely different physical structure of the two products.
| Product | g per Cup | g per Tbsp | Texture | Primary Use |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Panko (whole flakes) | 60g | 3.75g | Large, irregular flakes | Crispy coatings |
| Regular breadcrumbs (dry) | 108g | 6.75g | Fine, uniform powder | Binding, dense coatings |
| Fresh breadcrumbs | 50g | 3.1g | Soft, irregular chunks | Stuffing, meatballs |
| Panko (lightly crushed) | 75g | 4.7g | Medium irregular | Medium-crunch coating |
Regular breadcrumbs are ground from fully baked bread — crust included — dried thoroughly and processed into a uniform fine powder. That fine powder packs densely with minimal air gaps, hence 108g per cup. Panko's large, flat flakes cannot pack efficiently; each cup is more than 50% air by volume, hence 60g per cup.
Why Panko Fries Crunchier: The Food Science
Panko's culinary advantage is structural, not chemical. When coated food is submerged in hot oil, the moisture inside the food converts to steam and tries to escape outward. The breadcrumb coating simultaneously absorbs some oil. The result — crunch or sogginess — depends on how efficiently the steam can escape and how little oil is retained.
Panko's large, open-flake structure creates a highly porous coating with many channels for steam escape. Less steam is trapped inside the coating, so less oil is drawn in by condensation as the food cools. In controlled comparisons, panko coatings retain 15–30% less oil than fine breadcrumb coatings under identical frying conditions (375°F / 190°C, 3–4 minutes, canola oil). The result is a lighter, crunchier crust that stays crunchy for 20–30 minutes after frying versus 5–10 minutes for regular breadcrumb-coated items.
The crunch is also physically different. Fine breadcrumbs produce a uniform, thin, relatively soft crunch. Panko produces a multi-layered crunch with individual flakes that shatter independently — the characteristic "shattering" texture of good tonkatsu, chicken katsu, and Japanese fried shrimp (ebi fry).
Coating vs Binding: Two Different Applications
Panko is used in two fundamentally different ways in cooking, and the gram measurements matter differently for each:
Coating applications (tonkatsu, fried chicken, schnitzel, onion rings): The panko forms the outer crust. The amount used directly determines coating thickness and crunch intensity. Standard coating: 30–45g panko per 170g (6 oz) protein portion. Use a three-stage breading station: flour (for adhesion), egg wash (for binding the breadcrumbs), then panko. Season the panko itself with salt, pepper, and optionally spices — underseasoned panko coating produces bland results even when the protein inside is well-seasoned.
Binding applications (meatballs, meatloaf, crab cakes, salmon patties): Panko acts as a structural binder that absorbs moisture from the protein mixture, holding it together during cooking. For this application, panko and regular breadcrumbs perform more similarly — the textural difference matters less inside a meatball than on a coating. Standard ratios: 30–45g panko per 450g (1 lb) ground meat for meatballs; 60–90g per 450g for meatloaf. Soaking panko in milk for 2–3 minutes before mixing into meatball or meatloaf mixtures produces a panade that creates a more tender texture (the starch gelatinizes during cooking, preventing the proteins from squeezing together and becoming tough).
Panko in Non-Frying Applications
Panko works excellently as a baked topping — for casseroles, gratins, and stuffed vegetables. The flakes crisp up under dry heat just as they do in oil, producing a crunchy topping from an oven-baked dish.
Casserole topping: Mix 1 cup (60g) panko with 2 tablespoons (28g) melted butter and a pinch of salt. Spread over a 9×13 casserole. Bake at 375°F (190°C) for 20–25 minutes until golden. For a thicker, crunchier topping, use 1.5 cups (90g) panko.
Gratin topping: Mix panko with finely grated Parmesan (1:1 by volume, about 30g each) for a cheesy, crunchy crust. The Parmesan's fat helps brown the panko and adds flavor. Use 60–90g total mixture for a standard 8×8 baking dish.
Stuffed mushrooms and peppers: Panko as a topping prevents the stuffing from drying out by forming a crust that seals in moisture. A thin layer (2–3 tablespoons / 7.5–11g) per 4 large stuffed mushrooms is sufficient.
Common Questions About Panko
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¼ cup panko = 15 grams. For comparison, ¼ cup regular fine breadcrumbs = 27 grams. When a recipe says "¼ cup panko," expect 15g — much less mass than any other breadcrumb product at the same volume.
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Yes. Gluten-free panko is made from rice flour or a blend of GF flours. It weighs slightly more per cup than wheat panko — approximately 65–70g per cup — because rice-based crumbs are slightly denser. GF panko produces a comparable crunch to wheat panko, though it may brown slightly faster due to the higher sugar content of rice. Use identical gram weights when substituting GF panko for regular panko in recipes.
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Unopened panko keeps 12–18 months at room temperature. After opening, store in an airtight container and use within 3–6 months. Stale panko that has absorbed moisture will still work for binding applications (meatballs, meatloaf) but produces a less crunchy coating in fried applications. To check freshness, a pinch of panko should feel dry and crisp, not soft or clumped.
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Per 1 cup (60g) plain panko: add ½ teaspoon (3g) salt, ¼ teaspoon black pepper, and optional spices (garlic powder, paprika, dried herbs). For Japanese-style katsu: add only salt and white pepper — keep it neutral. For Italian-style: add 2 tablespoons grated Parmesan, ½ teaspoon dried oregano, ½ teaspoon garlic powder. Season generously — most of the coating's flavor impact comes from the seasoned breadcrumbs, not the protein inside.
- USDA FoodData Central — Bread crumbs, dry, grated, plain
- Serious Eats — The Food Lab: The Science of Frying
- Japan Centre — What is Panko? Guide to Japanese breadcrumbs
- Modernist Cuisine at Home — Breadcrumb coatings and oil absorption data