1 Gram of Short Grain Rice to Teaspoons Conversion
Questions: How many US teaspoons of short grain rice in 1 gram? How much is 1 gram of short grain rice in teaspoons?
The answer is: 1 gram of short grain rice is equivalent to 0.246 ( ~
'Weight' to Volume Converter
Grams of short grain rice to US teaspoons Chart
Grams of short grain rice to US teaspoons | ||
---|---|---|
0.1 gram of short grain rice | = | 0.0246 US teaspoon |
1/5 gram of short grain rice | = | 0.0492 US teaspoon |
0.3 gram of short grain rice | = | 0.0739 US teaspoon |
0.4 gram of short grain rice | = | 0.0985 US teaspoon |
1/2 gram of short grain rice | = | 0.123 US teaspoon |
0.6 gram of short grain rice | = | 0.148 US teaspoon |
0.7 gram of short grain rice | = | 0.172 US teaspoon |
0.8 gram of short grain rice | = | 0.197 US teaspoon |
0.9 gram of short grain rice | = | 0.222 US teaspoon |
1 gram of short grain rice | = | 0.246 US teaspoon |
Grams of short grain rice to US teaspoons | ||
---|---|---|
1 gram of short grain rice | = | 0.246 US teaspoon |
1.1 gram of short grain rice | = | 0.271 US teaspoon |
1 1/5 gram of short grain rice | = | 0.295 US teaspoon |
1.3 gram of short grain rice | = | 0.32 US teaspoon |
1.4 gram of short grain rice | = | 0.345 US teaspoon |
1 1/2 gram of short grain rice | = | 0.369 US teaspoon |
1.6 gram of short grain rice | = | 0.394 US teaspoon |
1.7 gram of short grain rice | = | 0.419 US teaspoon |
1.8 gram of short grain rice | = | 0.443 US teaspoon |
1.9 gram of short grain rice | = | 0.468 US teaspoon |
Note: some values may be rounded.
FAQs on short grain rice volume to weight conversion
1 gram of short grain rice equals how many US teaspoons?
1 gram of short grain rice is equivalent 0.246 ( ~
How much is 0.246 US teaspoon of short grain rice in grams?
0.246 US teaspoon of short grain rice equals 1 gram.
Weight to Volume Conversions - Cooking Ingredients
References:
Notes on ingredient measurements
It is a bit tricky to get an accurate food conversion since its characteristics change according to humidity, temperature, or how well packed the ingredient is. Ingredients that contain the terms sliced, minced, diced, crushed, chopped add uncertainties to the measurements. A good practice is to measure ingredients by weight, not by volume so that the error is decreased.
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