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.
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.
half cup of glass
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
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
One medium onion typically yields about 1 cup when chopped. To substitute with onion salt, use approximately 1 teaspoon of onion salt for every cup of chopped onion. Keep in mind that onion salt contains salt, so you may want to adjust other salt in your recipe accordingly.
For a medium onion, figure about a half cup.
250 grams in a cup.
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