How Much Is 1.92 Tablespoons of Cooking Wine in Grams?
1.92 tablespoons of cooking wine equals 27.84 g. Cooking wine has a density of 232g per cup (14.5g per tablespoon), which means it's relatively light compared to other common cooking ingredients. For comparison, 1.92 tablespoons of honey would be 40.8 g.
Formula and Step-by-Step
- Start with 1.92 tablespoons of cooking wine
- 1 tablespoon of cooking wine = 14.5g
- 1.92 × 14.5 = 27.84g
The same formula works for any amount. Multiply (or divide) by the density, then convert units as needed.
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.
Cooking Wine at Different Amounts
How cooking wine scales across common tablespoons measurements. Your amount (1.92 tablespoons) is highlighted.
For reference, 1.92 tablespoons of cooking wine (27.84g) is close in weight to a slice of cheese (28g).
Other Amounts of Cooking Wine
| Tablespoons | US Grams | Metric Tablespoon | Australian Tablespoon |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 tablespoon | 14.50 g | 14.71 g | 19.61 g |
| 1.92 tablespoons | 27.84 g | 28.24 g | 37.65 g |
| 2 tablespoons | 29.00 g | 29.42 g | 39.22 g |
| 3 tablespoons | 43.50 g | 44.13 g | 58.84 g |
| 4 tablespoons | 58.00 g | 58.84 g | 78.45 g |
| 5 tablespoons | 72.50 g | 73.54 g | 98.06 g |
| 6 tablespoons | 87.00 g | 88.25 g | 117.67 g |
| 8 tablespoons | 116.00 g | 117.67 g | 156.89 g |
| 10 tablespoons | 145.00 g | 147.09 g | 196.12 g |
| 12 tablespoons | 174.00 g | 176.51 g | 235.34 g |
| 16 tablespoons | 232.00 g | 235.34 g | 313.79 g |
Understanding the Units
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.
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.