How Much Is 8 Tablespoons of Cooking Wine in Grams?
8 tablespoons of cooking wine weighs 116.00 g. This is based on cooking wine having a density of 232g per cup. Because tablespoons measure volume and grams measure weight, the result depends on the ingredient, and a different ingredient would give a different result for the same 8 tablespoons.
Formula and Step-by-Step
- Start with 8 tablespoons of cooking wine
- 1 tablespoon of cooking wine = 14.5g
- 8 × 14.5 = 116g
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 (8 tablespoons) is highlighted.
For reference, 8 tablespoons of cooking wine (116g) is close in weight to a bar of soap (113g).
Other Amounts of Cooking Wine
| Tablespoons | US Grams | Metric Tablespoon | Australian Tablespoon |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 tablespoon | 14.50 g | 14.71 g | 19.61 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.