According to this Web site ( http://www.allaboutturkey.com/meze2.htm ), 4 tsp of salt (1 1/3 tbsp) weighs 24 grams. Therefore, a little over 5.5 tbsp or 16.5 tsp is 100g of salt. Because the size of grains of salt can vary, and result in more volume for less matter, it's really best to weigh salt when a weight is specified.
Consider a tablespoon of 30 mL and a density of 1,25 g/cm3 for powdered table salt.So 100 g salt is equivalent to approx. 3 tablespoons.
There are approximately 9 grams of salt in one tablespoon.There are 67.63 tablespoons U.S. in one liter.67.63 tablespoons/liter x 9 grams/tablespoon = 608.67 grams of salt per liter
That is approximately 66 tablespoons.
4,12 grams aluminum sulfate is equivalent to 0,012 moles (for the anhydrous salt).
According to the Nutrition Facts on a Hain 26 oz sea salt container, 1/4 teaspoon of salt is equivalent to 590 mg of salt.
Approximately 16 grams
That is approximately 15.937 tablespoons.
There will be a bit of variation in a measurement because salt crystals are not a uniform size. Now the good news, thanks to the Salt Institute, which is a non-profit trade association for the salt industry. They have the straight scoop (no pun intended) on salt. Salt weighs about 6 grams per teaspoon or about 18 grams per tablespoon. That makes your 3 tablespoons of salt weigh in at about 54 grams.
Consider a tablespoon of 30 mL and a density of 1,25 g/cm3 for powdered table salt.So 100 g salt is equivalent to approx. 3 tablespoons.
50 grams = 4 tablespoons
Tablespoons of what? Water, oil, salt, sugar?
Buy some scales and find out
There are approximately 9 grams of salt in one tablespoon.There are 67.63 tablespoons U.S. in one liter.67.63 tablespoons/liter x 9 grams/tablespoon = 608.67 grams of salt per liter
2/3 tablespoon of salt is approximately 10 gm
4 tbsp of salt is approximately 60 grams
5 grams of salt fills only 0.16 tablespoon ... 1/2 teaspoon of fine salt is roughly 5 grams
2 grams of salt