Sliced Mushrooms — Cups to Grams

1 cup sliced mushrooms = 70 grams (button/white)

Variant
Result
70grams

1 cup Sliced Mushrooms = 70 grams

Tablespoons15.9
Teaspoons46.7
Ounces2.47

Quick Conversion Table — Sliced Mushrooms

CupsGramsTablespoonsTeaspoons
¼17.5 g3.98 tbsp11.7 tsp
23.3 g5.3 tbsp15.5 tsp
½35 g7.95 tbsp23.3 tsp
46.7 g10.6 tbsp31.1 tsp
¾52.5 g11.9 tbsp35 tsp
170 g15.9 tbsp46.7 tsp
105 g23.9 tbsp70 tsp
2140 g31.8 tbsp93.3 tsp
3210 g47.7 tbsp140 tsp
4280 g63.6 tbsp186.7 tsp

Mushroom Varieties: Why Weight Per Cup Varies

The four most common fresh mushrooms have different weights per cup of sliced preparation. Understanding why helps predict behavior in cooking:

Button mushrooms (70g/cup sliced): The most widely available commercial mushroom. High water content (92% of fresh weight), thin flesh, mild flavor. Often the baseline for recipe development in American cookbooks. Their extreme water content means they shrink dramatically — 50%+ by weight — during sautéing.

Cremini mushrooms (72g/cup sliced): Marketed as "baby bella" or "baby portobello" — they are biologically the same species as button mushrooms (Agaricus bisporus), simply harvested at a more mature stage with less moisture and more developed flavor. Their slightly firmer flesh and lower water content makes them 2–3g heavier per cup and gives them better sautéing properties — they brown more readily than button mushrooms.

Shiitake mushrooms, fresh (78g/cup sliced): Significantly firmer and denser than button or cremini, with meaty caps and tough, fibrous stems (discard stems or save for stock). Fresh shiitake contain about 88% water — less than button mushrooms — and have a pronounced, savory umami flavor. The higher per-slice weight reflects denser flesh. Remove caps from stems before slicing; stem fibers remain tough even after long cooking.

Portobello mushrooms (85g/cup sliced): These are simply very mature cremini mushrooms, allowed to open and expand to 10–15cm caps. Their large size and dense, meaty flesh gives them the highest per-slice weight. Sliced portobello for cup measurement means 5–6mm slices of the cap — thick slabs that hold their shape during high-heat cooking. Portobello caps also contain more melanin pigment than button mushrooms, which darkens any sauce they are added to.

Package volume check: A standard 8-oz (227g) package of sliced button mushrooms fills approximately 3 cups when loosely measured. An 8-oz package of whole button mushrooms yields approximately 3 cups sliced, since slicing reduces the whole mushroom's air-trapping irregular shape into stackable slices. For portobello caps, 8 oz typically contains 2–3 large caps, sliced to yield 2.5–3 cups.

The 50% Shrinkage Rule and Sautéing Mushrooms Properly

Every recipe writer who has ever said "add 2 cups sliced mushrooms" when they meant cooked mushrooms has confused a cook. The shrinkage of mushrooms from raw to cooked is so dramatic that this ambiguity genuinely matters. The rule: 2 cups raw sliced mushrooms (140g) produces approximately 1 cup cooked mushrooms (approximately 65–70g) when properly sautéed. This 50% volume reduction and 50% weight reduction is water evaporation, not ingredient loss.

The quality of the sauté depends entirely on respecting the mushrooms' water content. Here is what happens physiologically: at room temperature, mushroom cells contain water inside their walls. When heat is applied, cell walls rupture and release this water into the pan. Until all this free water evaporates (which happens at 100°C), the pan temperature cannot exceed boiling point — and the Maillard browning reaction that creates flavor requires at least 110–120°C surface contact. This is why mushrooms "steam" before they brown.

The technique for maximum browning with minimum steaming: use the widest pan available (12-inch), preheat over high heat until shimmering, add butter or oil, then add mushrooms in a single layer that covers but does not crowd the pan. Do not stir for 2–3 minutes — allow direct contact with the hot pan surface. Turn when underside is golden-brown. Total time for properly browned button mushrooms: 5–8 minutes. Signs you are doing it right: mushrooms sizzle loudly, steam rises, and the pan develops fond (brown bits on the bottom).

Raw (cups)Raw (grams)Cooked (cups)Cooked (grams)
1 cup70g~½ cup~35g
2 cups140g~1 cup~70g
3 cups210g~1½ cups~105g
4 cups280g~2 cups~140g
8 oz package227g~1½ cups~114g

Dried Mushrooms: Conversion to Fresh Equivalents

Dried mushrooms are a concentrated flavor source and a pantry staple that can replace fresh mushrooms when fresh are unavailable. The standard conversion ratio is 1:8 by weight — 1 ounce (28g) dried mushrooms reconstitutes to approximately 8 ounces (225g) fresh mushroom equivalent in weight. In practical terms:

A ½-ounce (14g) package of dried porcini reconstitutes to approximately 4 ounces (113g) of fresh mushroom equivalent — about 1.5 cups sliced. A 1-ounce (28g) package produces about 8 ounces (225g) fresh equivalent — about 3 cups sliced.

Reconstitution method: Pour enough boiling water over the dried mushrooms to cover completely (they will float — push down and cover the bowl). Soak 30 minutes minimum; 60 minutes for maximum rehydration and flavor. The soaking liquid turns dark and deeply flavored — this mushroom broth is often more valuable than the reconstituted mushrooms themselves. Strain the liquid through a fine-mesh sieve lined with a paper towel to remove grit, then use as stock in sauces, risotto, or soups.

The reconstituted mushrooms will be softer and more pliable than fresh, with a more concentrated flavor. Squeeze gently before using to remove excess liquid (which you are adding back as the strained broth). For soups and stews: add reconstituted mushrooms and their strained broth directly. For sautéed applications: squeeze dry and proceed as with fresh, noting they will brown more quickly due to lower water content.

Sliced Mushrooms Conversion Table

CupsButton (g)Cremini (g)Shiitake (g)Portobello (g)
¼ cup18g18g20g21g
⅓ cup23g24g26g28g
½ cup35g36g39g43g
1 cup70g72g78g85g
2 cups140g144g156g170g
3 cups210g216g234g255g
8 oz package227g ≈ 3.2 cups227g ≈ 3.2 cups227g ≈ 2.9 cups227g ≈ 2.7 cups

Common Questions About Sliced Mushrooms

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