Kitchen resource hub

Cooking and Baking Measurement Guides

Ingredient Tally guides explain the measurement decisions behind the calculators. Learn how recipe scaling works, why cups-to-grams conversions depend on ingredients, how pan size affects baking, and when weight, volume, or temperature conversions need extra judgment.

Last updated: June 5, 2026 | Edited by Ingredient Tally Team

Convert with context

Kitchen conversions are clearer when you know whether the recipe is using weight, volume, temperature, or an ingredient-specific density estimate.

Scale recipes carefully

Serving-size math is simple, but pan size, bake time, seasoning strength, and rounding can change the final dish.

Improve repeatability

Better measuring habits make recipes easier to repeat, troubleshoot, and share with other cooks using different unit systems.

How to use this guide hub

Start with the guide closest to your recipe question, then open the calculators linked from that article. If you are converting dry ingredients, compare the cups-to-grams and grams-to-cups guidance. If you are scaling a bake, review recipe scaling, pan conversion, and oven temperature guidance together.

A useful workflow is to read the guide, use the linked calculator, then return to the guide for rounding and technique notes. That helps prevent the common problem of getting a number that is mathematically correct but awkward or risky for the actual recipe.

New to the site?

Read How Ingredient Tally Conversions Work first if you want the plain-language version of which kitchen calculations are exact, which are estimates, and which depend on recipe judgment.

Browse by task

Choose the pathway that matches your recipe problem

Baking conversions

When texture and repeatability matter

Start with cups to grams, compare grams to cups, then open the baking guides for pan and oven context.

Cooking conversions

When the recipe language is the main problem

Start with the kitchen converter, use ml to cups or ounces to grams, then browse the measurement guides.

Recipe scaling

When the batch size changes

Start with the recipe scaler, compare the pan calculator, then use the recipe-scaling guides to check rounding and seasoning decisions.

Measurements

Use these guides when the recipe language is unclear and you need to separate weight, volume, and kitchen system assumptions.

Ingredients

Use these guides when one ingredient behaves differently enough that a general chart is not good enough.