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Condensed Milk Tablespoons to Grams

Convert any amount of condensed milk between tablespoons and grams. 1 tablespoon of condensed milk equals 19.13 g. Use the calculator for custom amounts, or choose an amount below.

Calculator

19.13
See full breakdown for 1 tablespoon of condensed milk
Result using all tablespoon standards info
19.13 g (US) 19.40 g (Metric Tablespoon) 25.87 g (Australian Tablespoon)

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Popular Recipe Amounts

Common condensed milk measurements found in recipes.

Other Units for Condensed Milk

Convert condensed milk from tablespoons 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 Tablespoon?

One tablespoon holds about 15 milliliters. There are 16 tablespoons in a cup and 3 teaspoons in a tablespoon. In baking, tablespoon measurements are used for butter, oil, honey, and other ingredients where a full cup would be too much.

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.

Frequently Asked Questions

For condensed milk, 1 tablespoon equals 19.13 g. For other amounts, select an amount below or use the calculator for a custom quantity.

Weighing condensed milk on a kitchen scale is strongly recommended. Condensed milk is thick and sticky, so it clings to measuring cups and spoons, making volume measurements less reliable than for thinner liquids. If you must measure by volume, lightly oil the cup first so the condensed milk slides out cleanly.

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

Condensed milk is dense and sticky, so it clings to measuring cups and does not pour cleanly. Volume measurements can easily be off by 5-10% depending on how much condensed milk stays stuck to the container. A kitchen scale avoids this entirely and is the recommended way to measure sticky liquids.