Sticky Rice — Cups to Grams

1 cup uncooked sticky rice = 185 grams — soaking adds weight (240g/cup), steamed yields 175g/cup

Variant
Result
185grams

1 cup Sticky Rice = 185 grams

Tablespoons15.9
Teaspoons47.4
Ounces6.53

Quick Conversion Table — Sticky Rice

CupsGramsTablespoonsTeaspoons
¼46.3 g3.99 tbsp11.9 tsp
61.7 g5.32 tbsp15.8 tsp
½92.5 g7.97 tbsp23.7 tsp
123.3 g10.6 tbsp31.6 tsp
¾138.8 g12 tbsp35.6 tsp
1185 g15.9 tbsp47.4 tsp
277.5 g23.9 tbsp71.2 tsp
2370 g31.9 tbsp94.9 tsp
3555 g47.8 tbsp142.3 tsp
4740 g63.8 tbsp189.7 tsp

Measuring Sticky Rice: Dry, Soaked, and Cooked

Sticky rice is measured in three distinct states that produce very different weights per cup. Understanding which state your recipe specifies is critical — a recipe calling for 1 cup soaked sticky rice uses roughly 30% more material by weight than a recipe calling for 1 cup dry.

Dry (uncooked) — 185g/cup: Use a dry measuring cup, scoop and level. Dry sticky rice grains are opaque white, hard, and distinctly separate. This is the starting measurement for most recipes specifying "cups of sticky rice."

Soaked — 240g/cup: After 4–6 hours in cold water, grains absorb approximately 30% of their weight in water and become slightly translucent. Drain before steaming — soaked rice should be wet but not waterlogged. The soaked weight (240g/cup) is used for calculating total batch weight when recipes specify soaked volume.

Steamed — 175g/cup: Cooked sticky rice is slightly lighter per cup than raw because the bamboo steamer method evaporates surface moisture while cooking, unlike absorption cooking which retains all water in the grain. Pack gently into a measuring cup without compressing.

MeasureDry (g)Soaked (g)Steamed (g)
1 tablespoon11.6g15g
¼ cup46.25g60g43.75g
½ cup92.5g120g87.5g
1 cup185g240g175g
2 cups dry → cooked370g dry~350g cooked

The Science of Glutinous Rice: Why Soaking Is Non-Negotiable

Sticky rice (glutinous rice, Oryza sativa var. glutinosa) has a fundamentally different starch architecture from all other rice varieties. Its endosperm contains 98–100% amylopectin — the highly branched starch polymer that swells, gelatinizes, and creates adhesion — and only 0–2% amylose, the linear starch that keeps grains separate.

This extreme amylopectin dominance creates a physical barrier problem: the outer starch layer gelatinizes rapidly when exposed to heat, forming a semi-impermeable skin before heat can penetrate to the grain center. Soaking for 4–6 hours (or ideally 8–12 hours for large batches) preemptively hydrates the interior starch, allowing steam heat to cook the grain evenly from center to surface simultaneously.

Soaking time matters: 2 hours produces under-hydrated grains that cook unevenly. 4–6 hours is the practical minimum. 8–12 hours (overnight in the refrigerator) produces the most evenly cooked result with the best chewy-tender texture. Beyond 24 hours, the rice begins to ferment slightly and the texture becomes mushy — refrigerate if soaking longer than 6 hours at room temperature.

Water temperature: Cold or room-temperature water works equally well. Hot water is not recommended — it begins gelatinizing the surface starch prematurely, making the grain surface gummy before steaming.

The translucency test: Properly soaked sticky rice grains should be uniformly translucent (not opaque white) when held up to light. Opaque white centers indicate insufficient soaking. When in doubt, soak longer.

Traditional Bamboo Steamer Method

The traditional cooking vessel for sticky rice in Thai, Lao, and Northern Vietnamese cooking is a cone-shaped bamboo basket (mor neung in Thai) set inside a deep pot of boiling water. The cone shape creates a chimney effect, directing steam upward through the loosely packed rice grains. This cooking method is categorically different from absorption cooking and produces the characteristic slightly dry, individually distinct-yet-cohesive texture of authentic sticky rice.

Setup: Fill the pot with 2–3 inches of water — enough to boil vigorously without touching the rice basket. Bring to a full rolling boil before adding rice. Drain soaked rice and place loosely in the steamer basket — do not pack. The rice should fill no more than 2–3 inches deep for even cooking; cook in batches for large quantities.

Timing: Steam 20 minutes, then flip the entire rice mass using a wooden spatula or wet hands (rice sticks but shouldn't burn). Steam another 5 minutes. Total: 25 minutes from soaked and drained to fully cooked. The rice is done when it is uniformly translucent, cohesive when pressed, and has a slight chew but no raw starchy center.

Serving traditional style: In Lao and Isan Thai cuisine, sticky rice is served in a small bamboo basket (kra tip). Diners take a small amount (approximately 40–50g, about ¼ cup cooked), roll it into a ball with their fingers, and use it to scoop up the accompanying dishes. This hand-forming is only possible with properly cooked sticky rice — if it doesn't hold a ball shape, it was undercooked; if it's one solid mass, it was overcooked.

Sticky Rice Varieties and Regional Applications

Glutinous rice appears across Asian cuisines under different names with slight variations in grain size and application:

Thai/Lao Khao Niao: Long-grain glutinous rice (8–9mm), the staple carbohydrate of Northeast Thailand (Isan) and Laos — eaten at every meal. Commercially available as "sweet rice" or "glutinous rice" in most Asian grocery stores. Density: 185g/cup dry.

Japanese Mochigome: Shorter, rounder grains (5–6mm), used for mochi (pounded rice cakes), sekihan (red bean rice, cooked mixed with adzuki beans), and ohagi (sweet rice balls with red bean paste). Standard bag size in Japan: 500g (2.7 cups dry). For mochi: 1 cup (185g) mochigome yields approximately 300g mochi dough after pounding.

Chinese Nuo Mi: Used for zongzi (sticky rice dumplings wrapped in bamboo leaves), nian gao (New Year rice cake), and sticky rice in lotus leaf. Zongzi recipe: ½ cup (92.5g) dry glutinous rice per zongzi, soaked, mixed with fillings, and steamed 1.5–2 hours in bamboo leaf wrapping.

Filipine Malagkit: Used for kakanin (traditional rice cakes) including biko (coconut sticky rice cake) and palitaw (flat rice discs). Biko recipe: 2 cups (370g) dry malagkit + 2 cups (480ml) coconut milk + 1 cup (200g) brown sugar — serves 12–16 small pieces.

Common Questions About Sticky Rice