Kitchen math, done right

Scale any recipe to any batch size

Paste your ingredient list, turn the dial, and get the whole recipe rewritten in measures you can actually scoop — not 0.375 cups, but ¼ cup + 2 tbsp, with gram weights where they matter.

  • Fraction-smart output.Awkward results are rewritten as spoon-and-cup combos a measuring set can handle.
  • Grams built in.Flour, sugar, butter and 25+ pantry staples show a weight you can verify on a scale.
  • Nothing leaves your browser.Your recipe is parsed locally on this page. No upload, no account, no tracking of what you cook.

House standard: 1 cup = 240 ml · spoon-and-level — full methodology

The Scaling Pot FLC-240 · exact-fraction engine

Quantity · unit · ingredient

Scale dial

fonda las cazuelas · scaled recipe ticket 001
×2
estimates round to the nearest measurable spoon — taste as you go

No floating-point soup

How the scaling pot works

Three steps, all on this page, all documented on the methodology page.

01

Parse the line

1 ¾ cups brown sugar becomes a quantity, a unit and an ingredient — mixed numbers, unicode fractions, ranges like 1–2 tsp and “pinch of” lines all count.

02

Multiply exactly

Quantities are scaled as exact fractions, never decimals — so ⅓ cup tripled is exactly 1 cup, not 0.99999 cups. Your factor can be a dial preset, a custom number, or a servings pair.

03

Round to real spoons

Results snap to measures that exist in a drawer — quarter teaspoons, tablespoon combos, cup fractions — and add gram weights for 30 pantry staples so a scale can settle arguments.

Reference

The conversions behind every answer

The same tables the calculator uses, in the open. Values follow our house standard: 1 US cup = 240 ml, flour spooned and leveled, cup weights rounded to the nearest 5 g.

US volume ladder — every step is exact.
MeasureEqualsMillilitres
1 tablespoon3 tsp15 ml
¼ cup4 tbsp60 ml
⅓ cup5 tbsp + 1 tsp80 ml
½ cup8 tbsp120 ml
⅔ cup10 tbsp + 2 tsp160 ml
¾ cup12 tbsp180 ml
1 cup16 tbsp240 ml
1 pint2 cups480 ml
1 quart4 cups960 ml
Halves of the awkward ones — the lookups everyone needs mid-recipe.
Half of…Is
¾ cup6 tbsp
⅔ cup⅓ cup
½ cup¼ cup
⅓ cup2 tbsp + 2 tsp
¼ cup2 tbsp
1 tbsp1½ tsp
1 tsp½ tsp
½ tsp¼ tsp
⅓ tbsp½ tsp
Butter and eggs, US sizing. Egg weights are edible portion, without shell.
ItemVolumeWeight
1 stick butter½ cup · 8 tbsp113 g
½ stick butter¼ cup · 4 tbsp57 g
1 cup butter2 sticks227 g
1 large egg≈ 3¼ tbsp beaten≈ 50 g
1 large egg white≈ 2 tbsp≈ 30 g
1 large egg yolk≈ 1 tbsp≈ 18 g
1 medium egg≈ 44 g
Why “1 tsp salt” is ambiguous: brands pack differently. Scale salt by grams when you can.
Salt / leaveningGrams per tsp
Table salt6 g
Fine sea salt5 g
Morton kosher salt4.8 g
Diamond Crystal kosher salt3 g
Baking powder4 g
Baking soda4.8 g
Instant / active dry yeast3.1 g
Dry staples, grams per US cup (240 ml), spoon-and-level.
Ingredientg / cup
All-purpose flour120 g
Whole-wheat flour115 g
Cake flour110 g
Granulated sugar200 g
Brown sugar, packed215 g
Powdered sugar120 g
Unsweetened cocoa85 g
Cornstarch125 g
Rolled oats90 g
Long-grain white rice185 g
Wet and heavy staples, grams per US cup. Full table on the methodology page.
Ingredientg / cup
Water240 g
Milk240 g
Heavy cream240 g
Vegetable oil220 g
Olive oil215 g
Honey340 g
Maple syrup320 g
Greek yogurt245 g
Peanut butter255 g
Chocolate chips170 g

The honest part

What doesn’t scale in a straight line

Multiplying the numbers is the easy 90%. These four are the other 10% — the calculator flags them automatically when they appear in your list.

  • Eggs come in integers

    Half a recipe with 3 eggs needs 1½ eggs. Whisk one until uniform, weigh out 25 g, and it stops being a problem. How to halve an egg

    1 large egg ≈ 50 g
  • Salt & chile run ahead of taste

    Doubled stew with doubled salt usually tastes over-seasoned: evaporation, surface area and perception don’t double with it. Start at ~75% and finish by tasting. The seasoning rule

    start at 75%, taste up
  • Leavening hits geometry limits

    Baking powder scales cleanly to about 2×. Past that, the limiting factor is pan depth, not chemistry — split the batter across original-size pans instead. Why 2× is the line

    linear to 2×, then split pans
  • Time follows the pan, not the batch

    Two same-size pans of doubled batter bake in the original time. One deeper pan doesn’t. On the stove, bigger volumes heat and reduce slower. Cooking time when scaling

    check at the original time

Quick answers

Frequently asked

More on the full FAQ page.

Does the calculator change oven temperature or baking time?

No — and that’s deliberate. Time and temperature follow your pan size and depth, not the amount of batter. If you keep the same pan size (or use more pans of the same size), bake at the same temperature and start checking at the original time. See cooking time when scaling.

Is my recipe uploaded anywhere when I paste it?

No. Parsing and scaling run entirely in your browser on this page. The text you paste is never sent to a server, stored, or logged.

What cup size do you use?

The US cup at 240 ml, the size printed on US measuring cups sold today. Metric cups are 250 ml and old UK recipes may use imperial pints — if your recipe comes from outside the US, read US cups vs metric cups first.

Why does the result say “¼ cup + 2 tbsp” instead of “0.375 cups”?

Because no measuring cup in your drawer says 0.375. The calculator rewrites every scaled amount as the nearest combination of real measures — cup fractions, tablespoons, quarter-teaspoons — and tells you the gram weight when it knows the ingredient’s density.

Can I scale a recipe by servings instead of a multiplier?

Yes. Enter the servings your recipe makes and the servings you need (say 4 → 10) and the dial computes the exact factor (×2½ in that case) for every ingredient.