Weight(y) Matters
September 3rd, 2010 by Alice Medrich
Maybe it would take an iPhone app to get American home bakers to toss their measuring cups and start using a scale. If you want to skip my lecture on measuring (and why you should get a scale), just scroll down to see some iPhone apps (feel free to send your own photos). Meanwhile, ye faithful, read on…
First, when I say scale, I don’t mean a spring-loaded thing with a dial. I do mean a scale with batteries (like your smart phone, your iPod, your camera, and all of your other necessities). The scale should register eighths or tenths of an ounce. Such a scale can be had for less than the cost of ten lattes, btw. And, you can learn to use it in less time than it takes your barista to make those ten lattes.
If you bake (especially if you bake), here’s why you want a scale.
Consider flour. A heavy hand with flour is the prime suspect for bad baked goods. The amount of flour you put into your measuring cup can make the difference between a moist, light, poem of a cake and a doorstop. It can make the difference between buttery melt-in-your-mouth cookies (or fluffy pancakes) and miniature paperweights. What is a cup of flour anyway? If you stir the flour in your canister a little (but not to much) to loosen it, and then spoon it lightly into your measuring cup and sweep it level without packing, tapping, jiggling or shaking the cup, you’ll have 4 ¼ to 4 ½ ounces of flour in your cup. If you dip your cup into that same canister, and level it against the side, or shake it or tap it or jump up and down to level it, who knows how much flour you’ve got in there? And, if you measure right from the flour sack stored in the pantry jammed behind cans of beans or under the potatoes, then all bets are off. I asked a close friend to please measure a cup of flour at her house, as though she were preparing to bake a cake, and dump it into a bowl and bring it to me at my house. I put her cup of flour on my scale. It was 33% heavier than the lightly spooned and leveled cup described at the top of the paragraph. Can you tell me that a cake or cookies made with a 6-ounce cup of flour will come out remotely similar to those made with a 4 ½ -ounce cup?
Maybe you are living gluten free? Maybe you’ve wondered why you get great results from some recipes only some of the time? Gluten free baked goods are hypersensitive to measuring variation, and the non-wheat flours and starches (rice, corn, tapioca, oat, bean, potato, et al) are especially hard to measure consistently using measuring cups. To add insult to injury, if you make your own gluten free flour blend, the weight of 1 cup of your blend will depend on whether you measure it right after blending or weeks later after it has settled in the canister (that is, unless you make a point of really fluffing the mix before you measure each time). Masterful gluten free baking is challenging enough; using a scale eliminates one very significant wild card.
More reasons to use a scale? A scale streamlines your movements in the kitchen. You can measure ingredients right into the mixing bowl, so you’ll use fewer utensils and have less to clean up. A scale means never having to sift or chop before measuring, and never having to wonder how lightly or firmly to pack a cup of brown sugar. Some of the best chocolates don’t come in one once squares, so you need a scale. I could go on…
A scale means that your results for a given recipe will be more consistent from one time to the next, even (or especially!) if you bake that cake only once a year. If you are someone who is always tinkering and tweaking recipes—you probably make notes in the margin. Weighing is a better way to track your tweaks, especially small changes in critical ingredients such as flour.
September 03, 2010 at 10:40 pm, Lulu et Phoebe said:
ok, now those photos are hilarious. I agree though – this past year I’ve converted to using a scale (baking gluten free) and it makes a huge difference. Huge! Thanks for writing about this and wish more recipes came with weights! (btw, it’s Lisa Stander Horel aka Lulu and Phoebe, my kitchen buddies)
September 03, 2010 at 11:20 pm, Alice Medrich said:
HI Lisa! Don’t you think its time for all bloggers to start lobbying for the scale? We should have one agreed upon day when every blogger (or at least every baking blogger!) writes about weighing. It’s kind of like “honk if you own a kitchen scale…..) !
September 04, 2010 at 12:32 am, Drew @ How To Cook Like Your Grandmother said:
I’m not usually a baker, but if you organize that day, I’ll play.
September 04, 2010 at 1:06 am, Alice Medrich said:
Drew, I’ll remember your offer when I start to organize. Seriously!
September 04, 2010 at 5:08 pm, Lucy said:
…so am I getting a scale for Hannukah or what?
September 04, 2010 at 5:23 pm, Alice Medrich said:
Gee, I figured you'd want and iPhone! I'm so proud of you….mom
September 04, 2010 at 8:19 pm, olga said:
Alice, perhaps a dumb question, but using a scale allows you to dump the ingredients right into the bowl, but you should, in advance, know how much the measurements weigh, right? Thank you for posting this – I have been finding FAR better results when I weigh my ingredients, not measure by cups, etc.
September 04, 2010 at 9:52 pm, chefany said:
Pretty clever…yes, we are in the future and I say hurray for scaling!
September 05, 2010 at 2:08 am, Anonymous said:
I would be lost in my kitchen without my scale. I wish all cookbooks had measurements in weights using a kitchen scale.
September 05, 2010 at 5:06 am, Lulu et Phoebe said:
great idea. name the day. I'm in.
September 06, 2010 at 5:45 pm, Alice Medrich said:
Ok Lisa, I want to general a lot of support before we do this though. Any help you want to give will be appreciated.
September 06, 2010 at 6:05 pm, Alice Medrich said:
Olga, yes that's the challenge right now. If all recipes had weights it would be easier, and I mean to begin agitating towards that end for all future recipes. But in the meantime it's not that hard to learn the weights for the most critical and often used baking ingredients. Flour is critical…I gave you some weights in the post above. If you want a great guide to dozens of
September 09, 2010 at 2:18 am, veron said:
hahaha! I think I won't use my iphone as a scale, my husband already complains he takes a pound of sugar off each time he cleans it. But I've converted all the recipes I use for business into grams or ounces and use a scale – it definitely is easier and more consistent!
September 09, 2010 at 3:38 am, Sharon Delman said:
I love our scale. I use it for cooking. My husband uses it to record how much we're harvesting from the garden. It's quick, it's easy, it's precise . . . I just don't understand the barrier!
September 19, 2010 at 9:08 am, ♥Sugar♥Plum♥Fairy♥ said:
Oh Alice, m so happy to be and happy for u to be in blogosphere, its exciting and a blessing for us all!!
CUtey pics u have here n m sure in for anythng u might wanna have:-))
Infact loving it!!
Saw d recipe for Apricot lemon bars and am super excited to try 'em too!!!
Mia send sya sunshine smiles,topped with hugs for a super sunshine weekend!!!
will be here agn…
September 25, 2010 at 4:53 am, tasteofbeirut said:
I laughed at the photos! seriously a scale is a must and I realized that long ago thank god! this is what we used in Lebanon to buy stuff (still do ) and I searched all over Beirut last Xmas for US style cups and could not find them at any supermarket. Nobody uses that.
September 27, 2010 at 12:15 am, Catherine Negus said:
Professionally I have two scales that I use – one is for very small measurements. I have found another issue with liquids when they are not measured by weight. I filled a one cup measuring cup with water, then poured the water into another measuring cup, then another. You guessed it – different results with each one. It just proved that without a scale, liquid ingredients can be measured
September 27, 2010 at 4:30 pm, Jeanne/Art of Gluten-Free Baking said:
Those photos are hilarious! I love it! Also, as a gluten-free baker, the scale is great. But, gluten-free baking is daunting enough to newbies, and I don't want to scare them off of baking by insisting they buy a scale. I have had great success with measuring by volume as well as by weight! That is why I've started giving both types of measurements in my recipes.
That said
September 27, 2010 at 4:35 pm, Alice Medrich said:
Thanks for the feedback on GF baking Jeanne. I know the scale is still intimidating….but maybe we can change that over time. I'm curious how you do your volume measures? Scoop and level or spoon lightly and level? Do you fluff the flour in the container first? etc, etc.
September 28, 2010 at 3:04 pm, Deeba PAB said:
Are you Alice Medrich, the Alice Medrich who has written those beautiful dessert books? Gosh, I love your work, your recipes… evrything! You inspire me… totally!
October 01, 2010 at 1:43 am, diseño web said:
Great blog and wonderful recipe ideas
October 03, 2010 at 2:15 pm, Katrina said:
I converted to using a kitchen scale a few years ago and cannot live without it! GREAT post.
October 18, 2010 at 12:47 am, Laurie said:
Excellent blog on scales. I’ve recently moved from the professional kitchen to teaching home cooks and the biggest frustration is having to go back to “English” measurements. I vote for the scale to make a comeback and always tell my students it’s a must for bread making at the very least.
October 23, 2010 at 9:17 pm, Anonymous said:
I took some baking classes as part of a pastry arts program, and we weighed everything. Thus I got into the habit of weighing all my ingredients except for the tiny ones like teaspoons or less. I have 3 digital scales at home that I use daily. I also wish that all my baking cookbooks gave weights in addition to/instead of volume (my professional books only give weights). I find that I end up converting all volume recipes to weights anyway. Having an iPhone ( love the pics. btw), I was estatic to discover a really cool app that actually does that. It’s called “Kitchen Calculator Pro”, and it has a large database of ingredients so you can convert volume to weight (ie. 1 cup flour or sugar to oz). I use it regularly and highly recommend to anyone who wishes to convert volume of ingredients to their equal weight, but doesn’t have a reference guide. Of course you do need an iPhone to get the app. 🙂
October 28, 2010 at 12:36 am, Lori said:
I love my kitchen scales. My only iwsh is that all recipes would be in weight measurements. I back this movement 100 percent 😉
November 11, 2010 at 11:55 pm, AlisonH said:
I love those photos! I’ve got a scale, bought for measuring yarn amounts, and I will start using it for baking–those variances really got my attention, and thank you.
January 21, 2011 at 8:15 am, Kimberley said:
Oh, you are hilarious! I am, after many silly years of stubborn resistance, finally ready for a kitchen scale.
March 14, 2011 at 4:33 am, El said:
This is a wonderful post. Well said.
January 12, 2012 at 1:51 pm, Ingrid A said:
This is utterly brilliant.
As a European foodie and occasional blogger I've been forever struggling with US recipes and vice versa, when trying to incorporate US measures on my own blog, it's impossible.
How do I explain 100g of chopped chocolate in cups? If largely chopped it won't be enough, if too small, it's too much.
The right quantities
January 29, 2012 at 4:16 pm, Marc said:
I think it would be possible to rig a device that uses a level app for the iPhone (or an Android phone) to be the sensing element in a beam scale. The basic setup would be like the last photo. In one embodiment of the design, you’d need to have a collection of known weights (100 g, 200 g, etc.). You’d put the desired weight on one side of the arm (e.g., 100 grams) and then start adding the ingredient to the bucket on the other side of the arm until the bubble on the iPhone level is in the center. At that point, you have equal weights on each side. Attaching the balance arm to the iPhone wouldn’t be trivial, however, and having the right collection of balance weights on hand would be tricky.
Since very few of the recipes I use have ingredient weights (and those that do often have liquid ingredients in volume), I keep a sheet of paper on the refrigerator that lists the weights of commonly used liquid ingredients and sugars, like oil (1 cup = 200 grams) and honey (1 cup = 335 grams). A scale is especially handy for sticky and messy ingredients such as molasses — being able to pour from the bottle into the scale-mounted mixing bowl keeps a cup or spoon out of the dishwashing queue.