A teaspoon of water will be heavier. While they are both liquids, pudding will contain fat, which is less dense than water. (This is why oil and fat floats on top of water)
teaspoon
A gallon of gravy weighs more than a gallon of water, due to the fact it has a higher density.
5g ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- The volume of a teaspoon is considered to be 5 mL. The mass contained depends on the density of the material because the mass is the product between volume and density.
A ton of rocks weighs more. Since they both weigh a ton, then they weigh the same.
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).
An ounce is weight and a teaspoon is volume. A teaspoon of lead weighs a lot more than a teaspoon of water. It all depends on what you are weighing.
This depends on what you are weighing, since a teaspoon (like a measuring cup) is a volume measure, not a weight measure. So a teaspoon of sugar weighs more than a teaspoon of salt (since salt grains are more irregular so less fit on a teaspoon).
teaspoon
teaspoon
teaspoon
teaspoon
Of course it is Butterscotch that weighs more. The Colouring in the pudding adds a little extra weight to the pudding. I know pudding cups are measured in weight but you will get more pudding in a Vanilla pudding cup than a Butterscotch pudding cup, because of this fact right here. It is a proven scientific fact. I hope this helps and has answered you question. :)
teaspoon of water
In order to do this conversion you would need to know the density of the herb you are trying to figure out the weight of. For example: a teaspoon of bricks weighs more than a teaspoon of feathers, due to the fact that brick is more dense.
water
water
I would think not. The word "instant" implies that it comes together in contact with water, and without cooking.