Smoked Salmon — Cups to Grams

1 cup smoked salmon sliced = 120g — ribbons = 95g, diced = 150g

Variant
Result
120grams

1 cup Smoked Salmon = 120 grams

Tablespoons16
Teaspoons48
Ounces4.23

Quick Conversion Table — Smoked Salmon

CupsGramsTablespoonsTeaspoons
¼30 g4 tbsp12 tsp
40 g5.33 tbsp16 tsp
½60 g8 tbsp24 tsp
80 g10.7 tbsp32 tsp
¾90 g12 tbsp36 tsp
1120 g16 tbsp48 tsp
180 g24 tbsp72 tsp
2240 g32 tbsp96 tsp
3360 g48 tbsp144 tsp
4480 g64 tbsp192 tsp

Measuring Smoked Salmon: Sliced, Ribbons, and Diced

Smoked salmon's delicate, silky texture means it traps air very differently depending on how it is prepared. The measurement differences between forms are significant and affect recipe accuracy.

Sliced thin, paper-thin diagonal (120g/cup): The standard commercial form — long diagonal slices 1-2mm thick. When placed flat in a cup with light folding, these slices pack reasonably efficiently. A 100g pack fills approximately 0.83 cups sliced. This is the primary measurement for recipes specifying smoked salmon by volume.

Ribbons — loose thin strips (95g/cup): Strips cut or torn from slices (similar to chiffonade). The curling, irregular strips trap more air than flat slices, giving the lowest density. Ribbons are used for pasta tossing, salads, and applications where a lighter, more distributed presence is desired.

Diced to quarter-inch (150g/cup): Small cubes for dips, scrambled eggs, quiche, and pasta sauces where the salmon is a flavor component throughout the dish rather than a featured slice. The small cubes pack efficiently.

MeasureSliced thin (g)Ribbons (g)Diced 1/4-inch (g)
1 tablespoon7.5g5.9g9.4g
¼ cup30g23.75g37.5g
½ cup60g47.5g75g
1 cup120g95g150g
100g pack0.83 cups1.05 cups0.67 cups

Cold-Smoking Process: Temperature, Wood, and Duration

Cold-smoked salmon production involves two distinct phases: brining and cold-smoking. Understanding this process explains why the product behaves so differently from cooked fish and why temperature control is so critical.

Phase 1 — Brining: Salmon fillets are first dry-cured or wet-brined in salt (and often sugar) for 8-24 hours. This draws moisture from the flesh (reducing water activity), seasons the interior, and firms the texture. The brine ratio for commercial production is typically 70-80° brine (salt saturation levels), applied for shorter periods than artisan home cures. After brining, the fillets are rinsed and dried in a cool environment (pellicle formation) — the surface becomes slightly tacky, which helps smoke particles adhere uniformly.

Phase 2 — Cold-smoking: The brined fillets are placed in a cold-smoking chamber kept at 18-25 degrees C (not exceeding 30 degrees C) and exposed to cool wood smoke for 12-24 hours. The smoke source — typically hardwood chips or sawdust — is burned in a separate firebox connected to the main smoking chamber via a long duct, allowing the smoke to cool before reaching the fish. Oak is traditional in Scotland; beech and alder are common in Scandinavia. The smoke compounds (phenols, carbonyls, guaiacol, syringol) act as additional preservation agents and flavor contributors.

Why cold-smoked salmon is not cooked: At 18-25 degrees C, the internal temperature of the salmon fillet never approaches the 63 degrees C required to denature fish proteins (the temperature that turns flesh from translucent to opaque). This is why cold-smoked salmon retains the silky, raw-flesh texture. It is preserved through the combination of brine-salt reduction in water activity and smoke-phenolic antimicrobial action — not through heat. This also means cold-smoked salmon must be kept refrigerated at all times and has a limited shelf life.

Smoked Salmon in the Kitchen: Key Applications

Cold-smoked salmon's signature texture makes it primarily a raw-serving product, but it adapts well to warm applications when handled carefully. The golden rule: add at the very end, use low heat, and never boil.

Pasta with smoked salmon and cream (4 servings): Cook 350g pasta (linguine or tagliatelle). In the pasta pan, combine 200ml heavy cream + 1 tablespoon lemon juice + 1 tablespoon capers + zest of 1 lemon + black pepper over medium heat, 2 minutes. Add drained pasta, toss to coat. Remove from heat. Tear 150g (about 1.25 cups sliced) smoked salmon into large pieces and fold through the pasta off the heat. Serve immediately with additional lemon zest and fresh dill.

Smoked salmon scrambled eggs (2 servings): Whisk 4 eggs + 2 tablespoons creme fraiche + black pepper. Soft-scramble in a non-stick pan over low-medium heat, stirring constantly, until 80% set (still slightly liquid in places). Remove from heat. Fold in 60g (half cup sliced) smoked salmon torn into pieces. Serve on toasted sourdough with chives.

Smoked salmon dip: Combine 100g cream cheese + 60g smoked salmon (diced) + 2 tablespoons sour cream + 1 tablespoon lemon juice + 1 tablespoon capers + 2 tablespoons fresh dill, pulse in a food processor to a rough-smooth consistency. Serve with crackers, cucumber rounds, or rye crisps.

Nutritional Profile and Food Safety

Cold-smoked salmon is nutritionally dense — high in omega-3 fatty acids, protein, and several B vitamins, but also high in sodium due to the brining process. Per 100g: approximately 165-185 calories, 25g protein, 7-12g fat (2-4g saturated), 0g carbohydrate, 800-1,200mg sodium (varies significantly by product). The omega-3 fatty acids (EPA and DHA) content is approximately 1.5-2.5g per 100g — a significant contribution to the recommended daily 250mg EPA+DHA for healthy adults, even in a 30g serving.

Food safety: cold-smoked salmon is classified as a ready-to-eat (RTE) food in most regulatory frameworks because it is not cooked. It must be refrigerated continuously at 4 degrees C or below and used by the use-by date on the package. After opening, use within 3 days. Pregnant women, immunocompromised individuals, and young children are advised by food safety authorities (USDA, UK NHS, Food Standards Australia New Zealand) to avoid cold-smoked salmon due to risk of Listeria monocytogenes, which can survive and multiply in cold-smoked fish. Hot-smoked salmon (cooked to internal 63 degrees C) is safer for these groups.