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Cooking conversion
Teaspoons of Buttermilk to Ounces
How many ounces are in teaspoons of buttermilk? Type a value below to see the result instantly. Cooking conversions depend on the density of each ingredient — the math here uses 1.035 g/mL for buttermilk.
Calculator
1 tsp of buttermilk = 0.179948 oz
Teaspoons of Buttermilk to Ounces Conversion Table
Common values for buttermilk:
| Teaspoons of buttermilk | Ounces |
|---|---|
| 0.25 tsp | 0.044987 oz |
| 0.5 tsp | 0.089974 oz |
| 1 tsp | 0.179948 oz |
| 2 tsp | 0.359895 oz |
| 3 tsp | 0.539843 oz |
| 4 tsp | 0.719791 oz |
| 5 tsp | 0.899739 oz |
| 8 tsp | 1.4396 oz |
| 10 tsp | 1.7995 oz |
How this works
Buttermilk has a density of about 1.035 g/mL (usda fooddata central). That means 1 mL of buttermilk weighs 1.035 grams.
Ounces = teaspoons × 0.1799
Note: Cultured buttermilk.
Why a cup of buttermilk doesn't always weigh the same
Volume measurements are forgiving in some ways and brutal in others. A cup of buttermilk can vary by 10-20% in weight depending on how it's measured: spooned vs scooped, packed vs loose, sifted vs unsifted. The density figure used here (1.035 g/mL) matches the most common published recipe conventions, but if you're after baking precision, weighing on a kitchen scale is more accurate than measuring by volume.
Sourced from USDA FoodData Central. Cultured buttermilk.
Volume vs weight in cooking
The American convention of measuring ingredients by volume (cups, tablespoons, teaspoons) is convenient but introduces variability that doesn't exist in weight-based recipes. Most professional bakers and bakeries weigh ingredients to within a gram because the structure of baked goods depends on precise ingredient ratios. For everyday cooking — soups, sauces, sautés — the volume-to-weight imprecision rarely matters. For baking that depends on rising or texture (cakes, breads, laminated doughs), it matters a lot.
The conversion
Multiplying the volume of buttermilk by its density (1.035 g/mL) gives the weight in grams. The calculator at the top of this page does the math automatically; the formula box above shows the resulting linear factor for the specific volume and weight units selected here.
