Rice — Cups to Grams
1 cup white rice = 185 grams (uncooked)
1 cup Rice = 185 grams
Quick Conversion Table — Rice
| Cups | Grams | Tablespoons | Teaspoons |
|---|---|---|---|
| ¼ | 46.3 g | 3.99 tbsp | 11.9 tsp |
| ⅓ | 61.7 g | 5.32 tbsp | 15.8 tsp |
| ½ | 92.5 g | 7.97 tbsp | 23.7 tsp |
| ⅔ | 123.3 g | 10.6 tbsp | 31.6 tsp |
| ¾ | 138.8 g | 12 tbsp | 35.6 tsp |
| 1 | 185 g | 15.9 tbsp | 47.4 tsp |
| 1½ | 277.5 g | 23.9 tbsp | 71.2 tsp |
| 2 | 370 g | 31.9 tbsp | 94.9 tsp |
| 3 | 555 g | 47.8 tbsp | 142.3 tsp |
| 4 | 740 g | 63.8 tbsp | 189.7 tsp |
How to Measure Rice Accurately
Unlike flour, rice does not need special measuring technique — dry rice grains don't compress significantly when scooped into a cup. Scoop directly from the bag or container, fill to the rim, and level with your finger or a straight edge. This gives a consistent 185g for long-grain white rice, 190g for brown rice, and 180g for basmati.
However, there is one critical distinction that trips up cooks constantly: all the weights on this page refer to dry, uncooked rice. Cooked rice weighs differently because it has absorbed water — a cup of cooked rice weighs about 175–185g, similar to dry rice by coincidence, but yields much less actual rice because grains have swollen to 3× their original volume. If a recipe specifies "2 cups cooked rice," you cannot substitute 2 cups dry rice — you'd produce 6 cups cooked and have 4 cups of leftovers.
For cooking large batches or scaling recipes, weighing dry rice eliminates the ambiguity. 185g always means 185g of dry rice regardless of how the measuring cup was filled, and you can calculate your water requirement precisely: multiply the rice weight by 1.5 for white rice, or by 2.0 for brown rice.
Rice in Cooking: Why Precision Matters
Rice cooking is fundamentally about starch gelatinization controlled by precise water ratios. Rice grains contain two types of starch: amylose (straight chains) and amylopectin (branched chains). During cooking, these starches absorb water and swell, then gelatinize at temperatures between 140°F and 165°F (60°C–74°C). The ratio of water to rice determines whether all the starch fully gelatinizes — which gives fluffy, separate grains — or whether it over-hydrates, which produces mushy, sticky rice.
The water-to-rice ratio must be calculated against the weight of rice, not the volume — because how tightly you fill a cup determines how much starch is present, which changes how much water is needed. A cup of rice that weighs 185g needs about 278g (1¼ cups) of water for proper gelatinization. If your scooped cup actually contained 200g of rice but you added the standard water amount for 185g, the rice will be undercooked and chalky in the center.
Specific consequences of rice measurement errors: Too much rice with the same water produces undercooked, hard centers — the starch never fully gelatinizes because there isn't enough water to reach every grain. Too little rice with the same water produces mushy, blown-out grains — the starch over-hydrates and the grains burst, releasing amylopectin and creating a sticky, clumped mass.
For fried rice, precision matters in the opposite direction: you want slightly undercooked, drier rice so it fries rather than steams in the wok. Professional fried rice typically uses rice cooked at a 1:1.25 ratio (rice to water by weight), producing firmer grains that hold their shape during high-heat stir-frying.
Types of Rice and Their Weights Per Cup
| Rice Type | 1 Cup Dry Weight | Water Ratio (by weight) | Cooked Yield (cups) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Long-grain white | 185g | 1 : 1.5 | ~3 cups |
| Jasmine rice | 185g | 1 : 1.4 | ~3 cups |
| Basmati rice | 180g | 1 : 1.5 | ~3 cups |
| Short-grain white (sushi) | 200g | 1 : 1.2 | ~2.5 cups |
| Brown rice (long-grain) | 190g | 1 : 2.0 | ~2.5 cups |
| Wild rice | 160g | 1 : 3.0 | ~3.5 cups |
| Arborio (risotto) | 205g | gradual addition | ~3 cups |
Sushi rice (short-grain) is noticeably heavier per cup (200g) because the rounder, fatter grains pack more tightly. Wild rice is lighter (160g) because it's technically a grass seed with a coarser, more irregular structure that leaves more air space. Arborio rice for risotto uses the highest water ratio but it's added gradually — the constant stirring releases amylopectin continuously, which creates the characteristic creamy sauce around the grains.
Troubleshooting: When Rice Goes Wrong
Rice is mushy and sticky. Almost always too much water relative to rice, which can happen if you used a rice cooker cup (180 mL) for rice but measured water in full US cups. Fix: use the same cup type for both, or measure everything by weight. For recovery, spread cooked mushy rice on a baking sheet and place in a 300°F / 150°C oven for 5 minutes to dry out some of the excess moisture.
Rice has hard, chalky centers after the correct cooking time. Either too little water or the rice wasn't given time to steam after cooking. After simmering, remove from heat and let rice steam, covered, for 10 minutes — this allows residual heat to finish cooking the centers without adding more water. If centers are still hard after steaming, add 2 tablespoons of water per cup of rice, cover, and cook on low heat for 5 more minutes.
Bottom of the pot burns while the top is undercooked. The heat is too high during the simmering phase. After bringing water to a boil, reduce to the lowest possible setting — you want a very gentle simmer, just barely breaking the surface. At this low heat, rice takes 15–18 minutes to cook without burning.
Fried rice comes out mushy and clumped. Freshly cooked hot rice releases steam that immediately softens any rice added to the wok. The fix: cook rice the day before and refrigerate uncovered overnight. Cold rice (below 40°F / 4°C) has retrograded starch — the amylose chains recrystallize, making the grains firmer and drier, which is exactly what you need for proper frying.
Common Questions About Rice
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1 cup of uncooked long-grain white rice weighs 185 grams. Brown rice is 190g per cup, basmati is 180g, and jasmine is 185g. Short-grain (sushi) rice packs more tightly at 200g per cup. All figures are for dry, uncooked rice.
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1 cup of cooked white rice weighs approximately 175–185 grams — similar by coincidence to dry rice, but it represents far more water content. One cup dry (185g) yields about 3 cups cooked. For recipes using cooked rice, measure after cooking; for recipes cooking rice from dry, measure before cooking.
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For long-grain white rice: 1 part rice to 1.5 parts water by weight — 185g rice to 278g water (about 1¼ cups). For brown rice: 1 part rice to 2 parts water — 190g rice to 380g water. Using weight ratios is more reliable than volume ratios because it eliminates errors from how tightly the measuring cup was filled.
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Brown rice retains its bran layer — the fibrous outer coating removed to make white rice. This bran adds about 2–3% more mass per grain (190g vs 185g per cup). The bran also means brown rice takes longer to cook (40–45 min vs 15–18 min) and absorbs more water, because the bran acts as a barrier slowing water penetration into the starchy endosperm.
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About ⅔ cup (123g) of dry white rice produces 2 cups of cooked rice, since white rice triples in volume. For brown rice, which roughly doubles, you need 1 cup (190g) dry to produce 2 cups cooked. When meal prepping, remember that 1 cup of dry rice feeds 2–3 people as a side dish after cooking.
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Yes — rinsed rice absorbs 10–15% of its weight in water during rinsing. If you need 185g of rice, measure before rinsing. The absorbed surface water cooks off without affecting the outcome, but measuring after rinsing means you're actually cooking less rice than intended. Rinsing removes surface starch and talc coating, producing fluffier, less sticky cooked rice.
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The rice cooker cup included with Japanese and Korean appliances is 180 mL — not the 237 mL US cup. It holds about 140g of white rice per cup, not 185g. Always use the same cup type for both rice and water when using a rice cooker. For recipe conversions that call for US cups, use a standard measuring cup or weigh in grams.
Rice Conversion Table (Uncooked)
| Cups | Grams | Ounces |
|---|---|---|
| ¼ cup | 46 g | 1.62 oz |
| ⅓ cup | 62 g | 2.19 oz |
| ½ cup | 93 g | 3.28 oz |
| ⅔ cup | 123 g | 4.34 oz |
| ¾ cup | 139 g | 4.90 oz |
| 1 cup | 185 g | 6.53 oz |
| 1½ cups | 278 g | 9.80 oz |
| 2 cups | 370 g | 13.05 oz |
| 3 cups | 555 g | 19.58 oz |
| 4 cups | 740 g | 26.10 oz |
Related Converters
- USDA FoodData Central
- Harold McGee, On Food and Cooking — Scribner, 2004
- America's Test Kitchen, The Complete Cooking for Two Cookbook