The volume of 1 US tablespoon is 14.786765 milliliters.
Half a tablespoon is 7.393382 milliliters.
Only if you think of pure water, this
7.393382 milliliters weighs 7.393382 grams.
It is unlikely anyone would need 6 decimal places in these measurements.
A tablespoonful can vary, certainly by a bit of a milliliter. That's why 15 ml is marked on tablespoons and not 14.786765 ml.
Well, that depends entirely upon what you are measuring. Grams is a unit of mass and a teaspoon is a unit of volume. For instance: If you fill a teaspoon with water it's weight (mass x gravity) is very small. However, if you fill that same teaspoon with lead it would be much heavier. Seeing that gravity doesn't change, nor does the teaspoon...the only thing that changes is the mass (number of grams). So there isn't a set number of grams per teaspoon. It depends upon what you are measuring. This applies no mater how many Grams or teaspoons you are trying to convert.
Well, that depends entirely upon what you are measuring. Grams is a unit of mass and a teaspoon is a unit of volume. For instance: If you fill a teaspoon with water it's weight (mass x gravity) is very small. However, if you fill that same teaspoon with lead it would be much heavier. Seeing that gravity doesn't change, nor does the teaspoon...the only thing that changes is the mass (number of grams). So there isn't a set number of grams per teaspoon. It depends upon what you are measuring. This applies no mater how many Grams or teaspoons you are trying to convert.
Depends what kind of powder.
Approximately 2 grams
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.
That is approximately 6 grams
1 Teaspoon of salt is equal to about six gram of salt so 1/4 Teaspoon of salt weighs about 1-1/2 grams. To get 1 gram of sodium from table salt, you would need to ingest 2.5 grams (1 gram from sodium, 1.5 grams from chloride). A teaspoon of salt weighs approximately 6.6 grams.
Hi: a teaspoon usually can contain 3 to 5 ml of liquid. One milliliter of cream roughly weights 1 gram. So a half of a gram of cream will equal a sixth to a tenth part of a tablespoon. As you see it is too of a small amount to be measured with a teaspoon. Not to mention that the size of a teaspoon is not standardized. A more practical (and precise) approach would be to measure that amount with a 5ml syringe. Half a gram of cream would be half a milliliter in the syringe (0,5ml).
Less than half a teaspoon.
Approximately 6 gm in a teaspoon of 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 3.78 grams of salt.
Approximately 5 grams of salt in a teaspoon.
It is roughly a half a teaspoon. davidmelkins@gmail.com
That is approximately 6 grams
That is approximately 6 grams
About 5 grams
Approximately 5 gm in a teaspoon of table salt
5 grams of salt is approximately 1 teaspoon.
1 Teaspoon of salt is equal to about six gram of salt so 1/4 Teaspoon of salt weighs about 1-1/2 grams. To get 1 gram of sodium from table salt, you would need to ingest 2.5 grams (1 gram from sodium, 1.5 grams from chloride). A teaspoon of salt weighs approximately 6.6 grams.
If the density of table salt is 0.92 grams per ml, then there are approximately 4.5 grams of salt in one teaspoon, usually considered to be 5 ml.