How Much Is 216 Teaspoons of Brown Sugar in Ounces?
216 teaspoons of brown sugar weighs 34.92 oz. This is based on brown sugar having a density of 220g per cup. Because teaspoons measure volume and ounces measure weight, the result depends on the ingredient, and a different ingredient would give a different result for the same 216 teaspoons.
Formula and Step-by-Step
- Start with 216 teaspoons of brown sugar
- 1 teaspoon of brown sugar = 4.58g
- 216 × 4.58 = 990g
- Convert grams to ounces: 990 ÷ 28.3495 = 34.92 oz
The same formula works for any amount. Multiply (or divide) by the density, then convert units as needed.
Measuring Tip
If your brown sugar has hardened, microwave it with a damp paper towel for 20 seconds. Hard brown sugar is still the same weight but impossible to measure by volume.
Brown Sugar at Different Amounts
How brown sugar scales across common teaspoons measurements. Your amount (216 teaspoons) is highlighted.
For reference, 216 teaspoons of brown sugar (990g) is close in weight to a pineapple (1,000g).
Other Amounts of Brown Sugar
| Teaspoons | US Ounces | Metric Teaspoon | Imperial Teaspoon |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0.25 teaspoons | 0.04 oz | 0.04 oz | 0.05 oz |
| 0.5 teaspoons | 0.08 oz | 0.08 oz | 0.10 oz |
| 1 teaspoon | 0.16 oz | 0.16 oz | 0.19 oz |
| 1.5 teaspoons | 0.24 oz | 0.25 oz | 0.29 oz |
| 2 teaspoons | 0.32 oz | 0.33 oz | 0.39 oz |
| 3 teaspoons | 0.49 oz | 0.49 oz | 0.58 oz |
| 4 teaspoons | 0.65 oz | 0.66 oz | 0.78 oz |
| 5 teaspoons | 0.81 oz | 0.82 oz | 0.97 oz |
| 6 teaspoons | 0.97 oz | 0.98 oz | 1.16 oz |
| 8 teaspoons | 1.29 oz | 1.31 oz | 1.55 oz |
| 216 teaspoons | 34.92 oz | 35.42 oz | 41.94 oz |
Understanding the Units
What is a Teaspoon?
One teaspoon holds about 5 milliliters. There are 3 teaspoons in a tablespoon and 48 teaspoons in a cup. Teaspoon accuracy matters most with leaveners like baking powder and baking soda, where small differences affect rise and texture.
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.