If you do not have a means to meaure quantities accurately, you can still estimate. But bear in mind, measuring cups are not expensive. They're pretty easy to get.
5 ml is about a teaspoon. 5 ml = 1.01442068 US teaspoons
If your regular spoon is a tablespoon, then there are three teaspoons per tablespoon. Spoons in place settings vary in size, but generally the smaller spoon is a teaspoon and the larger is a tablespoon.
Tsp refers to teaspoon which is a measuring tool and a small spoon cutlery silver ware item. It is a unit of measurement of liquids in most countries.
a small spoon is a teaspoon. remember tables are bigger than tea. that's how to remember :D
I used a measuring spoon and put one level teaspoon of organic, gelatinized black maca root powder on my food scale. It measured exactly 4 grams.
One tenth a teaspoon is a pinch. Ever heard of "A pinch of cinnamin"? Kinda like that.
NO, 5 ml equals a teaspoon.
Vanilla extract is liquid, so use measuring spoons to measure it, or for large quantities use a measuring cup for liquids. Vanilla powder can be measured with measuring spoons or a measuring cup for solids. Whole bean vanilla doesn't usually need a measuring device, since the recipe will say something like "seeds of 1 whole vanilla bean."
If you have a 1 ml measuring spoon.
1.25ml is a quarter of a teaspoon
to measure
Measure weight with a spoon?
A measuring spoon is frequently used to measure ingredients when cooking.
1/6th of a teaspoon but damned if I can find a measuring spoon that small.
If you do not have a two-thirds teaspoon measuring spoon, you can still measure out this amount using a regular teaspoon. Since two-thirds of a teaspoon is equivalent to 0.67 teaspoons, you can estimate this by filling a teaspoon up to the halfway mark and then adding a little more than half of that amount. Alternatively, you can use a measuring cup with milliliter markings and measure out approximately 3.33 milliliters to achieve the equivalent of two-thirds of a teaspoon.
5 ml is about a teaspoon. 5 ml = 1.01442068 US teaspoons
Well, honey, technically speaking, an iced tea spoon is longer than a regular teaspoon to reach the bottom of tall glasses, but they both hold the same volume of liquid. So, if you're measuring out a teaspoon of sugar for your iced tea, you can use either spoon, but just be prepared for some side-eye from the etiquette police if you use the wrong one at a fancy tea party.