Ziti — Cups to Grams

1 cup dry ziti = 120 grams | cooked = 140g/cup | 1 lb box = 3.8 cups dry. Smooth tube pasta — the definitive shape for baked ziti

Variant
Result
120grams

1 cup Ziti = 120 grams

Tablespoons16
Teaspoons48
Ounces4.23

Quick Conversion Table — Ziti

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

Ziti's Smooth Tube and Why It Measures Differently Than Rigatoni

Ziti — from the Neapolitan dialect word for "bridegroom" (a reference to its role at wedding feasts) — is a smooth-walled tube pasta with straight-cut ends. Its smooth surface and consistent ~10mm diameter allow the tubes to pack with moderate efficiency in a measuring cup, yielding 120g per cup — denser than rigatoni (100g/cup) because rigatoni's larger diameter and prominent ridges create more air pockets when randomly oriented in a cup.

The smooth walls of ziti are not merely cosmetic. They affect how sauces coat the pasta: smooth pasta receives sauce on its exterior surface only, while ridged pasta (penne rigate, rigatoni) catches sauce in the grooves as well. For baked applications where sauce saturates the pasta by absorption during oven time, the distinction matters less — ziti absorbs sauce through its hollow interior and from the surrounding sauce by osmosis. For stovetop applications (ziti aglio e olio, ziti with light sauces), the smooth surface is a liability — oil-based sauces do not cling as well as they would to a ridged surface.

Dry pasta shapeg per cupNotes
Ziti120gSmooth tube, straight cut, ~10mm
Penne105gRidged, diagonal cut, ~12–14mm
Rigatoni100gRidged, large tube ~20–25mm
Macaroni (elbow)105gSmall curved tube
Fusilli100gSpiral, air gaps between turns
Farfalle95gBow-tie, lightest density

The weight difference between dry and cooked (120g vs 140g per cup) is smaller for ziti than for long pasta like spaghetti because the dry tube structure limits radial expansion — the walls can only swell so much before structural resistance prevents further water absorption per unit volume.

Baked Ziti: The Classic New York Italian-American Dish

Baked ziti is the defining pasta dish of Italian-American Sunday cooking. Unlike its Italian antecedents (pasta al forno is a broad category in Southern Italian cooking), baked ziti as understood in New York and greater New England is a specific dish: ziti, ricotta, marinara, and mozzarella layered and baked until bubbly. It is simultaneously a weeknight staple and a celebratory dish — the same recipe feeds a family of 4 or a church potluck of 20 depending on pan size.

The critical proportions for a standard 9×13 baking dish (serves 8–10):

IngredientUS quantityWeightCup equivalent
Dry ziti (par-cooked)1 lb box454g3.8 cups dry
Marinara sauce24 oz jar or homemade680g~3 cups
Whole-milk ricotta16 oz container454g~2 cups
Shredded low-moisture mozzarella16 oz bag454g~4 cups
Grated Parmigiano-Reggiano½ cup loosely packed~50g½ cup
Egg (beaten, into ricotta)1 large50g

The par-cook step is non-negotiable. If you cook the ziti to al dente before baking, the pasta will be mushy by the end of the 45-minute oven time. Par-cook to 2 minutes under the al dente time listed on the package — typically 8–10 minutes total for a package that lists 10–12 minutes. Drain but do not rinse; the starchy surface water helps the sauce adhere.

Assembly method: Mix egg into ricotta with salt, pepper, and fresh basil or parsley. In the 9×13 pan: ½ cup marinara on the bottom (prevents sticking). Half the ziti. Half the ricotta mixture, dropped by spoonfuls. Half the mozzarella. Half the remaining marinara. Repeat. Top with remaining Parmigiano. Cover tightly with foil. Bake at 190°C (375°F) for 30 minutes. Remove foil, bake 15 additional minutes until golden and bubbling at edges. Rest 10 minutes.

Ziti vs Penne: The Practical Kitchen Distinction

The ziti-versus-penne question comes up constantly, because both are hollow tubes sold in 1 lb boxes that look nearly identical in the grocery aisle. There are three genuine differences and three situations where those differences matter.

Smooth (ziti) vs ridged (penne rigate): The dominant supermarket penne is penne rigate — ridged. Ridges increase sauce adhesion in stovetop dishes. Ziti is smooth. For baked dishes: negligible difference. For stovetop with heavy sauce: slight advantage to ridged penne. For oil-based sauces: ridges win clearly.

Cut angle: Ziti cut straight, penne cut diagonally. The diagonal cut of penne increases the interior-opening surface area, theoretically allowing sauce to enter the tube more efficiently during tossing. In practice, both tubes fill with sauce in baked applications — the cut angle doesn't matter for baked ziti.

Density (ziti 120g/cup vs penne 105g/cup): This 15g/cup difference is the most practically relevant. If a recipe specifies "1 lb of ziti" and you substitute penne, you'll have approximately the same weight of pasta (1 lb box) but a slightly different cups-to-weight ratio. For weight-specified recipes, the substitution is direct. For cup-specified recipes, use the same cup quantity but know penne will be lighter.

For baked ziti specifically: using penne instead of ziti is completely acceptable and extremely common. The dish will be visually different (diagonal cuts visible in the layers) but the flavor, texture, and baking behavior are identical. Most Italian-American home cooks use whatever tube pasta is on hand and call it "baked ziti" regardless of shape.

Ziti in Italian Cooking: Beyond Baked Ziti

In Southern Italy — particularly Naples and Sicily — ziti historically referred to a very long pasta (30–40cm lengths) that was broken by hand before cooking. Traditional Sicilian pasta al forno uses these long-form ziti, broken into irregular lengths, mixed with eggplant, ragù, hard-boiled eggs, and caciocavallo cheese. American packaged "ziti" is pre-cut short (8–10cm), a concession to practical packaging and cooking convenience.

Classic Neapolitan preparations beyond baked ziti:

Ziti alla genovese: A slow-cooked onion and beef ragù of Neapolitan origin (despite the name suggesting Genoa — the naming is disputed). The ragù cooks for 3–5 hours until the onions dissolve into a sweet, unctuous sauce. Proportions: 500g beef (chuck or brisket) + 1.5 kg yellow onions (yes, 3× the weight of the meat) + 100ml dry white wine + olive oil. After 4 hours, the onions have reduced to a brown, sweet purée that coats the smooth ziti beautifully. The smooth surface of ziti is a slight advantage here — the sauce is thick enough to coat without ridges for grip.

Ziti con le sarde (pasta with sardines): A Sicilian classic — ziti with fresh sardines, wild fennel, raisins, pine nuts, and saffron-tinged onions. The sweet-savory-anise combination is uniquely Sicilian. This dish is typically made with long-form ziti, broken by hand into 4–5 cm pieces. It would not work with penne — the smooth surface and irregular broken ends are integral to the dish's character.

Common Questions About Ziti