Sweet Corn — Cups to Grams

1 cup frozen corn kernels = 165 grams (fresh off cob = 154g)

Variant
Result
165grams

1 cup Sweet Corn = 165 grams

Tablespoons16
Teaspoons48.5
Ounces5.82

Quick Conversion Table — Sweet Corn

CupsGramsTablespoonsTeaspoons
¼41.3 g4.01 tbsp12.1 tsp
55 g5.34 tbsp16.2 tsp
½82.5 g8.01 tbsp24.3 tsp
110 g10.7 tbsp32.4 tsp
¾123.8 g12 tbsp36.4 tsp
1165 g16 tbsp48.5 tsp
247.5 g24 tbsp72.8 tsp
2330 g32 tbsp97.1 tsp
3495 g48.1 tbsp145.6 tsp
4660 g64.1 tbsp194.1 tsp

Fresh, Frozen, and Canned: The Weight Story

Sweet corn kernels in three forms weigh nearly the same per cup, which makes substitution straightforward. Fresh kernels cut from the cob are slightly irregular in size and pack loosely, giving 154 grams per cup. Frozen kernels are uniform in size (machine-cut), pack more consistently, and at 165 grams per cup are 7% denser than fresh. Canned kernels, at 164 grams per cup drained, sit between the two.

The near-identical weights of frozen and canned corn (165g vs 164g per cup) exist by coincidence of processing — frozen corn is cut to standard kernel size and IQF-frozen without weight change; canned corn is heated and compressed slightly by the canning liquid, ending up at similar density. Both are excellent substitutes for fresh corn in cooked applications. Fresh cut corn is preferred for raw preparations (corn salad, succotash) where the crisp kernel snap and sweet corn milk are important textural elements.

The 11-gram difference between fresh (154g) and frozen (165g) corn per cup is too small to matter in most recipes. However, for baked cornbread using 1.5 cups of corn, you'd get 231g fresh vs 247g frozen — a 16-gram difference that could add 1–2 extra teaspoons of moisture to your batter. Reduce liquid elsewhere by 1 tablespoon when substituting frozen for fresh in cornbread recipes.

Ear-to-Kernel Yield: Practical Field Guide

Planning for fresh corn recipes requires knowing ear yield. Here are reliable estimates for common ear sizes:

Ear SizeEar LengthKernel YieldCup Equivalent
Small15–18cm (6–7")70–85g~½ cup
Medium20–22cm (8–9")100–115g~⅔ cup
Large23–25cm (9–10")120–145g~¾–1 cup
Jumbo25–30cm (10–12")145–175g~1–1.1 cups

These yields are for raw kernels cut from the cob, skin-removed. Corn is sold with husks still on in many markets — the husk and silk account for approximately 20–25% of gross ear weight. A 300g whole ear (with husk) yields approximately 225g clean cob, which in turn yields approximately 110–130g of kernels (the cob itself is about half the clean weight).

Cutting technique affects yield significantly. The most common mistake is cutting too far from the cob, leaving a row of kernel base attached to the cob. A sharp chef's knife held nearly parallel to the cob, with light pressure, cuts at the kernel base and maximizes yield. Scraping the "milk" (the sweet fluid remaining in the kernel bases after cutting) with the back of the knife adds 1–2 teaspoons per ear of intensely sweet corn essence — this is the best part and the secret to rich corn pudding and corn risotto.

Cornbread: Corn Kernel Ratios

The role of whole corn kernels in cornbread is textural — they create moist pockets and bursts of corn sweetness in the otherwise crumbly cornmeal structure. The ratio matters:

Cornbread StyleCorn KernelsPer 12-piece PanNotes
Classic Southern (no kernels)0gPure cornmeal; not sweet
Northern-style sweet½ cup (82g)7g per pieceAdds texture; slight sweetness
Corn-forward cornbread1 cup (165g)14g per pieceVisible corn presence
Jalapeño corn cornbread1 cup (165g)14g per pieceAdd 50–75g diced jalapeño
Creamed corn cornbread1 cup (240g)20g per pieceUses creamed corn product

Creamed corn (a canned product made from corn scraped whole with the milk) weighs 240g per cup — significantly denser than whole kernel corn — because it contains the corn liquid mixed with some whole kernels. Substituting equal volumes of creamed corn for whole kernel corn in cornbread adds dramatically more moisture and sweetness, which is why creamed corn cornbread has a distinctly more moist, cake-like crumb than whole-kernel versions.

Common Questions About Sweet Corn