As in most of the foods you use in a kitchen, this question doesn't have an answer - sort of. The weight all depends on how you have packed the tablespoons, whether or not it's whole leaf or chopped, even different bunches of cilantro will have different water weights. Everyone who weighs their tablespoon of herbs will get a different answer...
2 Tbsp dried cilantro = 1/4 cup fresh cilantro
1 T fresh = 1t dried , so 2 T fresh cilantro = 2 t dried
Ingredients:1/2 cup green onions, cut into 1/2-inch lengths1 to 2 hot green chili peppers, seeded and coarsely chopped2 tablespoons chopped fresh ginger2 cloves garlic, peeled1 cup packed cilantro leaves2 tablespoons vegetable oil2 tablespoons lime juice1 teaspoon salt1 teaspoon sugar1/4 teaspoon ground cuminPreparation:Drop green onions, chilies, ginger and garlic through feed tube of food processor with motor running. Stop machine and add cilantro, oil, lime juice, salt, sugar and cumin; process until cilantro is finely chopped.
That is 5.12 tablespoons
About 8 grams
Use 1/3 or 1/2 of the fresh amount. So, if the recipe calls for 1 teaspoon fresh cilantro, you use 1/3 or 1/2 teaspoon of dried.
2 tablespoons is approximately 30 ml
Tablespoon of WHAT? Grams are a measure of weight, tablespoons a measure of volume. One does not translate to the other.
That is approximately 4 tablespoons
2 tablespoons about 2 tablespoons
Tablespoons is a measure of volume, while grams (g) is a measure of weight. It is impossible to convert a weight measurement to a volume measurement without knowing the item being measured and the size of the particles. For example, 30 grams of stones will fill fewer tablespoons than 30 grams of fiberglass insulation. Also, it will take more pebbles to fill a tablespoon than rocks.
30 ml is 2 tablespoons. 60 ml is 4 tablespoons.