How Much Is 2 Fluid Ounces of Evaporated Milk in Grams?
2 fluid ounces of evaporated milk weighs 63.00 g. This is based on evaporated milk having a density of 252g per cup. Because fluid ounces measure volume and grams measure weight, the result depends on the ingredient, and a different ingredient would give a different result for the same 2 fluid ounces.
Formula and Step-by-Step
- Start with 2 fluid ounces of evaporated milk
- 1 fluid ounce of evaporated milk = 31.5g
- 2 × 31.5 = 63g
The same formula works for any amount. Multiply (or divide) by the density, then convert units as needed.
Mental Math Shortcut
Quick check: 2 fluid ounces is just double the single-fluid ounce weight. 1 fluid ounce = 31.5g, so 2 = 63g.
Measuring Tip
Liquid densities vary: oils weigh less per cup than water, while syrups and honey weigh more. This is why ingredient-specific conversions matter even for liquids.
Evaporated Milk at Different Amounts
How evaporated milk scales across common fluid ounces measurements. Your amount (2 fluid ounces) is highlighted.
For reference, 2 fluid ounces of evaporated milk (63g) is close in weight to a whole large egg (57g).
Other Amounts of Evaporated Milk
| Fluid Ounces | US Grams | UK Fluid Ounce |
|---|---|---|
| 1 fluid ounce | 31.50 g | 30.26 g |
| 2 fluid ounces | 63.00 g | 60.53 g |
| 3 fluid ounces | 94.50 g | 90.79 g |
| 4 fluid ounces | 126.00 g | 121.05 g |
| 5 fluid ounces | 157.50 g | 151.32 g |
| 6 fluid ounces | 189.00 g | 181.58 g |
| 8 fluid ounces | 252.00 g | 242.11 g |
| 10 fluid ounces | 315.00 g | 302.63 g |
| 12 fluid ounces | 378.00 g | 363.16 g |
| 16 fluid ounces | 504.00 g | 484.21 g |
Understanding the Units
What is a Fluid Ounce?
There are 8 fluid ounces in a US cup and 128 fluid ounces in a US gallon. The UK fluid ounce is slightly smaller (28.413 ml vs 29.574 ml), so UK and US recipes using fluid ounces will differ slightly.
What is a Gram?
Weighing ingredients in grams eliminates the variability of volume measurements. A cup of flour can weigh anywhere from 120g to 160g depending on how it was scooped, but 120g of flour is always 120g of flour.