A tablespoon of whole allspice is about 40 berries, and a tablespoon of ground allspice would be about 15-20. I would probably use two tablespoons and one teaspoon.
Notice that many recipes call to cook with the whole berries and then take them out before eating, or else leave the berries in a marinade. If this is the case, ground allspice is not a good substitute. If you must use ground, you should probably only use half the amount or even less.
1 whole teaspoon ground allspice = 5 whole allspice berries
1 whole teaspoon ground allspice = 5 whole allspice berries
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Allspice is usually sold as a ground up powder like nutmeg or cinnamon. However, in its solid form the Allspice is in the shape of a small sphere about the size of WHOLE Black Pepper. (about 3mm balls) When Allspice is used in cooking Corned Beef or Pickled Pork, it is used in its Whole form and discarded after cooking. A teaspoon is approx. 40 Whole balls & weighs about 3 gram total .
Allspice peppers are much more potent than the ground version. As a result, the amont of ground allspice to equate to 3 whole peppers is 4.5 Tbsp. It seems like a lot, however the flavor and essence of the pepper is lost mostly when it is ground and not freshly.
1/2 tsp cinnamon, 1/4 tsp ground ginger, 1/8 tsp allspice, 1/8 tsp nutmeg equals 1 tsp of pumpkin pie spice
The best combination of spices for homemade pumpkin pie is as follows: 1 teaspoon ground ginger 1 to 2 teaspoons ground cinnamon 1/4 teaspoon ground cloves or allspice If you are using the pre-mixed pumpkin pie spice, use 2 to 3 teaspoons.
6mc
Not over 1 tsp. Ground is much stronger. Taste as you go.
1 teas
103 grams
1 teaspoon
If one teaspoon of whole cloves is approximately equivalent to 0.75 teaspoons of ground cloves, then 0.50 teaspoons of whole cloves is equivalent to 0.375 teaspoons of ground cloves. If you do not have ground cloves, then a substitute to use is ground allspice.