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Cooking Wine Grams to Tablespoons

Convert any amount of cooking wine between grams and tablespoons. 1 gram of cooking wine equals 0.07 tbsp. Use the calculator for custom amounts, or choose an amount below.

Calculator

0.07
See full breakdown for 1 gram of cooking wine
Result using all tablespoon standards info
0.07 tbsp (US) 0.07 tbsp (Metric Tablespoon) 0.05 tbsp (Australian Tablespoon)

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Popular Recipe Amounts

Common cooking wine measurements found in recipes.

Other Units for Cooking Wine

Convert cooking wine from grams to other units. Each link has its own calculator and conversion amounts.

Similar Ingredients

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.

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 Tablespoon?

Tablespoon sizes differ by country. A US tablespoon is 14.787 ml, close to the 15 ml metric standard used in most countries. An Australian tablespoon is 20 ml, about 35% larger than US. An imperial tablespoon is 17.758 ml. If your recipe comes from Australia, the larger tablespoon size can make a real difference.

Frequently Asked Questions

For cooking wine, 1 gram equals 0.07 tbsp. For other amounts, select an amount below or use the calculator for a custom quantity.

If you have a kitchen scale, weighing cooking wine gives you an exact starting point for this conversion. If you need to measure by volume instead, use a liquid measuring spoon on a flat surface and read the level at eye height.

Approximately. Sauces, syrups, and processed liquids can vary somewhat by brand and recipe. The grams to tablespoons result for cooking wine should be treated as a close estimate rather than an exact value.

The same weight of different ingredients fills different volumes because each ingredient has a different density. A gram of cooking wine fills a different number of tablespoons than a gram of a lighter or heavier ingredient. That is why this converter needs to know which ingredient you are measuring.