Raspberries — Cups to Grams
1 cup fresh raspberries = 123 grams (frozen = 140g)
1 cup Raspberries = 123 grams
Quick Conversion Table — Raspberries
| Cups | Grams | Tablespoons | Teaspoons |
|---|---|---|---|
| ¼ | 30.8 g | 4 tbsp | 11.8 tsp |
| ⅓ | 41 g | 5.32 tbsp | 15.8 tsp |
| ½ | 61.5 g | 7.99 tbsp | 23.7 tsp |
| ⅔ | 82 g | 10.6 tbsp | 31.5 tsp |
| ¾ | 92.3 g | 12 tbsp | 35.5 tsp |
| 1 | 123 g | 16 tbsp | 47.3 tsp |
| 1½ | 184.5 g | 24 tbsp | 71 tsp |
| 2 | 246 g | 31.9 tbsp | 94.6 tsp |
| 3 | 369 g | 47.9 tbsp | 141.9 tsp |
| 4 | 492 g | 63.9 tbsp | 189.2 tsp |
Why Raspberries Are the Hardest Berry to Measure by Cup
Raspberries are aggregate drupelets — each berry is a cluster of 80–100 small juice sacs arranged around a hollow central core. That hollow core is the defining measurement problem. When you fill a cup with raspberries, you are filling it with fruit plus a substantial column of air running through each berry's center, plus the air gaps between berries. This means the density variation from one cup to the next is higher with raspberries than with almost any other berry.
A carefully placed cup of large raspberries — berries oriented core-up, settled gently — can weigh as little as 105 grams. The same cup filled with smaller berries shaken to settle gives 135 grams. The 123g benchmark assumes a loose fill with natural random orientation, which is how most home cooks measure. For consistent results in any recipe using more than ½ cup of raspberries, weighing on a kitchen scale is the only reliable method.
Frozen raspberries read 140g/cup because freezing collapses the hollow core. The cell walls of each drupelet rupture as water expands during freezing. When frozen, the berries flatten and the central air cavity disappears entirely. More raspberry mass fits in the same cup volume. The 14% weight difference between fresh and frozen is larger than with any other common berry — larger than blueberries (5%), strawberries (6%), or blackberries (8%).
Raspberry Weights at a Glance
| Measure | Fresh (g) | Frozen (g) |
|---|---|---|
| 1 teaspoon | 2.6g | 2.9g |
| 1 tablespoon | 7.7g | 8.8g |
| ¼ cup | 31g | 35g |
| ⅓ cup | 41g | 47g |
| ½ cup | 62g | 70g |
| 1 cup | 123g | 140g |
| 1 pint (2 cups) | 246g | 280g |
| 1 pound | 454g (~3.7 cups) | 454g (~3.2 cups) |
Retail raspberries are typically sold in 6 oz (170g) half-pint and 12 oz (340g) pint clamshells. A 6 oz pack gives you approximately 1.4 cups fresh; a 12 oz pack gives approximately 2.8 cups. These numbers assume average berry size — small-berry packs may give 5–10% more cups per ounce due to better packing density.
Raspberry Muffins and Baked Goods: Getting the Ratio Right
Raspberries present a unique challenge in baking that other berries don't: their high acid content (pH 3.2–3.7) reacts aggressively with baking soda. When acidic raspberry juice contacts baking soda in a batter, it triggers immediate CO₂ release — bubbling that should happen in the oven happens prematurely on your counter. The result is a muffin or cake with a tight, dense crumb and a red-stained interior. The fix: fold raspberries in last, bake immediately, and avoid resting the batter.
The standard ratio for raspberry muffins is 1 to 1.5 cups (123–185g) per 12-muffin batch. At 123g total, each muffin gets roughly 10 grams of raspberry — present but not dominant. At 185g, you get 15 grams per muffin, which is the "bakery-loaded" level where juice pockets form visibly in the crumb. Beyond 200g for a standard 12-muffin batch, the structural integrity of the crumb begins to suffer — too many juice pockets weaken the batter network.
Unlike blueberries, raspberries should not be tossed in flour before folding in. The flour coating traps moisture inside the berry during baking rather than allowing it to steam out, which makes the surrounding crumb gummy. Add them bare, fold in three or four turns of the spatula, and get the batter in the oven within 5 minutes.
Raspberry Tart and Pavlova Quantities
Fresh raspberries are non-negotiable for cold applications. Thawed frozen raspberries collapse completely — the drupelet structure falls apart and they release all their stored juice. For raspberry tarts, pavlova, cheesecake topping, and fresh fruit arrangements, only fresh berries will hold their shape.
| Application | Volume | Weight (fresh) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 9-inch tart (top layer only) | 2–2½ cups | 246–307g | Berries placed cavity-down on pastry cream |
| 9-inch tart (filled + topped) | 3½–4½ cups | 430–554g | Includes cooked coulis filling |
| Pavlova (10-inch round) | 1½–2 cups | 185–246g | Mix with other berries if desired |
| Raspberry sauce (coulis) | 1 cup | 123g | Yields ~½ cup strained sauce |
| 4-inch tartlet | ½ cup | 62g | ~30–35 berries |
| 12-muffin batch | 1–1½ cups | 123–185g | Add frozen; bake immediately |
| 9-inch galette | 2 cups | 246g | Toss with 2 tbsp sugar, 1 tbsp cornstarch |
For raspberry coulis, the yield ratio is important: 1 cup (123g) fresh raspberries cooked with 2 tablespoons sugar and strained through a fine-mesh sieve yields approximately 60–70 ml of strained sauce. The seeds and pulp left behind account for roughly 35–40% of the starting weight. If a recipe calls for "½ cup raspberry coulis," plan on starting with at least 1.5 cups (185g) fresh or frozen berries.
Handling Fresh Raspberries Without Bruising
Raspberries have the shortest handling window of any commercially sold berry. At room temperature, a perfect raspberry deteriorates visibly within 24–36 hours of picking. At refrigerator temperature (2–4°C), properly stored dry raspberries last 3–5 days. The bruising problem compounds the measuring difficulty — even gently moving raspberries from container to measuring cup can burst drupelets on the bottom layer.
For measuring, tip the container rather than scooping: let raspberries roll gently into the cup from above rather than pushing a cup through a pile of berries. For baking, weigh them in the measuring cup and pour directly into the batter — do not transfer to a separate bowl first. Each transfer risks bruising. Minimizing touches between fridge and batter is the key to muffins with intact raspberry pockets rather than smeared red streaks.
Washing raspberries before measuring requires care. Rinse only under the gentlest possible water flow, or dip briefly in cold water and lift out. Pat dry rather than rubbing. Wet raspberries sitting in a measuring cup will add 5–10 grams of surface water to your measurement — weight them after patting dry, not before.
Common Questions About Raspberries
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1 cup of fresh raspberries weighs 123 grams. The hollow center of each berry makes cup measuring less reliable than with solid fruits — actual weight can range from 105g to 135g depending on berry size and how loosely they are filled. For baking, weigh to 123g for consistency.
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Approximately 55–65 fresh raspberries fill a US cup at 123g. Smaller heritage varieties can pack 80+ per cup. Count varies too much to rely on for baking — use a scale.
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No — add frozen raspberries directly from the freezer for muffins, cakes, and quick breads. Thawing releases red juice that streaks batter and triggers premature leavening reaction with baking soda. Add frozen, fold minimally, bake immediately, add 4–5 minutes to baking time.
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1 tablespoon of fresh raspberries weighs approximately 7.7 grams (2–4 berries depending on size). 1 teaspoon weighs 2.6 grams. For small garnish quantities, counting berries is more practical than spoon-measuring.
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A 12 oz (340g) pint clamshell of fresh raspberries yields approximately 2.75 cups. A 6 oz (170g) half-pint gives approximately 1.4 cups. These are approximate — berry size affects packing density significantly.
- USDA FoodData Central — Raspberries, raw (FDC ID 167755)
- King Arthur Baking — Ingredient Weight Chart
- On Food and Cooking — Harold McGee, Scribner 2004
- The Food Lab — J. Kenji López-Alt, W. W. Norton 2015