Tahini — Cups to Grams

1 cup tahini = 240 grams (1 tbsp = 15g)

Result
240grams

1 cup Tahini = 240 grams

Tablespoons16
Teaspoons48
Ounces8.47

Quick Conversion Table — Tahini

CupsGramsTablespoonsTeaspoons
¼60 g4 tbsp12 tsp
80 g5.33 tbsp16 tsp
½120 g8 tbsp24 tsp
160 g10.7 tbsp32 tsp
¾180 g12 tbsp36 tsp
1240 g16 tbsp48 tsp
360 g24 tbsp72 tsp
2480 g32 tbsp96 tsp
3720 g48 tbsp144 tsp
4960 g64 tbsp192 tsp

Understanding Tahini Density and Separation

Tahini is ground sesame seed paste — 100% sesame, nothing added in quality products. The density of 240g per cup reflects a blend of sesame oil (the lighter fraction) and sesame solids (ground sesame flesh, the heavier fraction). A freshly opened, well-stirred jar produces consistent 240g-per-cup measurements. An unstirred, separated jar with a top layer of pure oil and a stiff solid bottom will measure very differently — a cup scooped from the top could weigh as little as 210g (mostly oil); a cup scraped from the solid bottom could weigh 270–280g.

This is why weighting tahini is significantly more accurate than volume measurement, particularly for baked goods and sauces where the fat-to-solid ratio affects texture. 15g per tablespoon is the reliable reference for well-stirred tahini of any brand.

Separation is normal and not a sign of spoilage. It's simply the physics of a non-emulsified suspension of heavier sesame solids in lighter sesame oil. Some brands add emulsifiers to prevent separation; natural, minimal-ingredient tahini always separates. Store upside down to keep oil distribution more even. To stir: use a narrow butter knife or chopstick to work through the paste from the bottom of the jar upward, folding in the separated oil.

Tahini in Hummus: The Ratio Guide

The tahini-to-chickpea ratio is the single biggest variable in hummus recipes. American cookbook recipes tend to use less tahini than Middle Eastern preparations. Here's the spectrum:

Hummus StyleTahini per 425g can chickpeasTahini weightFlavor profile
Light / everyday2 tbsp30gChickpea-forward, mild
Standard American3–4 tbsp45–60gBalanced, creamy
Israeli restaurant-style6–8 tbsp90–120gRich, nutty, slightly bitter
Palestinian "hummus bi tahini"½–⅔ cup120–160gVery rich, tahini-forward

For the high-tahini Israeli-style hummus made famous by Yotam Ottolenghi and similar restaurants, the technique matters as much as the ratio. Process the chickpeas and tahini for 5+ minutes in a food processor, adding ice water to produce a lighter, fluffier texture. The emulsification of tahini with water creates a temporary emulsion that becomes creamy and white. Add the water gradually while the processor runs — this technique produces the silky, aerated texture that differentiates restaurant hummus from grocery store paste.

Tahini Dressings and Sauces: Dilution Ratios

Pure tahini (240g/cup) is too thick and intensely flavored to use as a sauce. Tahini dressing requires dilution with water or citrus juice. Water paradoxically causes tahini to seize initially (become thicker) before thinning as more water is added — a counterintuitive behavior caused by the disruption of sesame oil hydrophobic interactions. Add water gradually and keep whisking through the initial seizing stage.

Standard tahini sauce (for falafel, salads, bowls): 60g tahini (4 tbsp) + 60g water + 30g lemon juice + 1 garlic clove + salt. This yields approximately ¾ cup of sauce at a pourable consistency. For a thicker sauce, use less water. For dressing, add more lemon juice and a pinch of cumin. The sauce keeps refrigerated for 5–7 days and thickens on standing — thin with water before serving.

Sticky measuring tip: Weigh tahini directly. If using a measuring spoon, spray it lightly with cooking spray first. A silicone spatula cleans tahini from spoons and cups more efficiently than a metal utensil. For recipes requiring both oil and tahini, measure the oil first — it coats the cup and allows tahini to slide out cleanly.

Common Questions About Tahini