Cooking Wine Tablespoons to Ounces
Convert any amount of cooking wine between tablespoons and ounces. 1 tablespoon of cooking wine equals 0.51 oz. Use the calculator for custom amounts, or choose an amount below.
Calculator
Select an Amount
Popular Recipe Amounts
Common cooking wine measurements found in recipes.
Other Units for Cooking Wine
Convert cooking wine from tablespoons to other units. Each link has its own calculator and conversion amounts.
Similar Ingredients
Measuring Tip
For liquids, place your measuring spoon 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.
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 an Ounce?
An ounce (oz) is a US customary unit of weight equal to 28.3495 grams or 1/16 of a pound. In cooking, "ounces" refers to weight (avoirdupois ounces), not fluid ounces which measure volume.
Frequently Asked Questions
1 tablespoon of cooking wine is 0.51 oz. This conversion uses the ingredient's density and scales proportionally - pick an amount or try the calculator.
The most accurate way is to weigh cooking wine on a kitchen scale. If you are measuring by volume, use a liquid measuring spoon on a flat surface and read the level at eye height. Liquids settle naturally, so volume measurements are already quite consistent.
Approximately. Sauces, syrups, and processed liquids can vary somewhat by brand and recipe. The tablespoons to ounces result for cooking wine should be treated as a close estimate rather than an exact value.
For liquids like cooking wine, volume measurements are already quite accurate since liquids settle to a consistent level. A kitchen scale adds precision but the difference is typically small for liquid ingredients.