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How Much Is 58 Grams of Cooking Wine in Milliliters?

58 grams of cooking wine equals 59.15 ml. Cooking wine has a density of 232g per cup. A lighter ingredient like flour (125g/cup) would fill more volume at the same weight, which is why ingredient-specific conversions matter.

58 grams of cooking wine
=
59.15ml
59.15

Formula and Step-by-Step

grams ÷ 232g/cup × 236.588 = milliliters
  1. Start with 58 grams of cooking wine
  2. 1 cup of cooking wine = 232g
  3. 58g ÷ 232g/cup = 0.25 cups × 236.588 = 59.15 milliliters

The same formula works for any amount. Multiply (or divide) by the density, then convert units as needed.

Measuring Tip

For liquids, place your measuring cup on a flat surface and read at eye level. The bottom of the meniscus (the curve at the surface) should align with the measurement line.

Cooking Wine at Different Amounts

How cooking wine scales across common grams measurements. Your amount (58 grams) is highlighted.

5 g5.10 ml10 g10.20 ml25 g25.49 ml50 g50.99 ml58 g59.15 ml75 g76.48 ml100 g101.98 ml150 g152.97 ml

Other Amounts of Cooking Wine

Grams Milliliters
5 grams 5.10 ml
10 grams 10.20 ml
25 grams 25.49 ml
50 grams 50.99 ml
58 grams 59.15 ml
75 grams 76.48 ml
100 grams 101.98 ml
150 grams 152.97 ml
200 grams 203.96 ml
250 grams 254.94 ml
500 grams 509.89 ml

Understanding the Units

What is a Gram?

Grams are the preferred unit in professional kitchens and bakeries because they allow exact recipe scaling. To double a recipe, simply double the gram values. No need to worry about how tightly an ingredient is packed into a cup.

What is a Milliliter?

Milliliters measure volume and are used worldwide for cooking and baking. For water at room temperature, 1 ml weighs approximately 1 gram, but this relationship does not hold for other ingredients.

Frequently Asked Questions

About 59.15 ml, based on cooking wine having a density of 232g per cup. The exact amount depends on how the ingredient is measured and the specific product.
Divide the grams by 232 (grams per cup) to get cups, then multiply by 236.588 to get milliliters. For 58 grams: 58 ÷ 232 = 0.25 cups × 236.588 = 59.15 ml.
For the most accurate results, weigh cooking wine on a kitchen scale. If measuring by volume, use a liquid measuring cup on a flat surface and read the level at eye height.
Temperature has a minimal effect on most cooking liquids. The density of cooking wine changes slightly with temperature, but the difference is usually less than 1-2% between refrigerator and room temperature. This conversion assumes room temperature.
Reverse the conversion: 59.15 ml ÷ 236.588 = 0.25 cups, then 0.25 × 232g/cup = 58g. Or use the Milliliters to Grams converter.