Olive oil has many more calories than say safflower oil. They're all different. Try this
trick--- read the bottle !
1 tbsp of fat.
51 tbsp 1 oz = 2 tbsp 1 tbsp = 0.5 oz
Here is one of my favorite recipes, I usually put it over cold noodles. All you have to do is mix it all together: 2 tbsp. soy sauce 1 tbsp. hot sauce 1 tbsp. sesame oil 1 tbsp. rice vinegar 1 tsp. sugar 1 clove garlic 1 tbsp. peanut oil 1/3 c. toasted sesame seeds
16 tbsp
There are about 120 calories in 1 tbsp of safflower oil.
A 1/4 cup contains 4 tablespoons of oil.A 1/4 cup contains 4 tablespoons of oil.
1/2
1 tbsp of water is 15 ml.
A generic food, depends on the salsa and the size of the tablespoon. Let's say 30 cals on average.
That is about 0.33 tbsp
4 tbsp 1 cup = 16 tbsp 1 tbsp = 0.06 cup
Using the mass/calorie and volume/calorie densities for saffron given at fatsecret.com, we find that 100g saffron = 310 calories, and 1 tbsp = 7 calories. We can therefore convert these energy densities into mass/vol densities: (100 g/310 calories) * (7 calories / 1 tbsp) = 2.258065 g/1 tbsp (calorie units cancel out). So mathematically it's about 2.25 g/tbsp (we simply ignore the 0.008065 since realistically it is too small to measure) , which sounds about right because dried lavender buds, which are also very small and very light in weight, weighs about 3g/tbsp.