Well, 1/4 cup dehydrated onion equals 1 full cup of fresh onion, so a half cup of fresh onion would then be 1/8 cup of dehydrated onion. That's the same as 1 and 1/2 Tbsp.
1.5 cup dehydrated onion is equal to 6 cup of fresh onion
6 ounces of onion would be equal to 3/4 of a cup. This is because a cup is equal to 8 ounces.
1 to 2 tablespoons. or 3-6 teaspoons. onion dehydrates quite a bit. 2 tablespoons dehydrated onion = about 1 medium sized onion. Onion powder takes about half that space so 1 tablespoon powder = about 1 medium onion. 2 medium onions (more or less) makes 1 cup of diced onion, so 2 tablespoons of powder should equal about the same in a recipe, however the flavor of onion powder, depending on how fresh it is can be stronger than that of fresh onion in a cooked recipe, mainly because it is more evenly dispersed, so you might want to use less. **Rehydrating dehydrated minced onion will not yield the original volume of the onion but only about 1/4 of it.
I just weighed one cup of chopped onion: 4 ounces.
A tablespoon of onion powder equals about a medium sized onion, which would be about a cup, chopped. So, a tablespoon.
1/8 teaspoon onion powder equals 1 tablespoon minced onion also read as this: 1/8 teaspoon onion powder equals 1/16 cup of minced onion
half cup of glass
Small onion = 4 ounces by weight or about ½ cup chopped Medium onion = 8 ounces, or about 1 cup chopped Large onion = 12 ounces, or about 1½ cups chopped Jumbo onion = 16 ounces, or about 2 cups chopped
For a medium onion, figure about a half cup.
250 grams in a cup.
1 cup is 48 teaspoons.
Depends how big they are. I often use them and see from 5- 9 or so in a cup.
Equivalents: 5 medium onions = 1 pound = 2 cups chopped = 3 cups sliced1 small onion = 1/3 cup = 1 teaspoon onion powder = 1 tablespoon dried onion flakes