Ingredient hub
Heavy cream
Heavy cream is the high-fat part of milk, with a fat content of 36-40%. Its richness makes it perfect for creamy sauces and stable whipped cream.
Use it for whipping to decorate desserts, enriching soups and sauces, or making chocolate ganache.
Quick convert
- US cup = 236.588 mL
- 1 tbsp = 14.787 mL
- 1 tsp = 4.929 mL
Density source:USDA FoodData Central
Kitchen Conversion Chart
Cups, tbsp, tsp, mL and oz — all in one printable reference for oils, liquids, dairy and sauces.
Dairy specifics
Dairy products (milk, cream, yogurt, cheese) have different fat and water percentages. Volume hides these differences; weight keeps sauces, batters, and doughs consistent.
- Fat content shifts density; pick the correct milk/cream/fat level if variants exist.
- For cheese, shredded vs grated vs cubed changes volume—prefer grams.
Does fat percentage matter?Yes. A cup of heavy cream is heavier than milk; swapping without weight alters richness and texture.
Storage & tools
- Refrigerate perishable foods within 2 hours (1 hour if above 32 °C / 90 °F).
- Keep the refrigerator at or below 4 °C (40 °F); cold chain reduces mass loss.
- Cool hot foods in shallow containers so they chill quickly without condensation.
- Use an appliance thermometer to verify fridge and freezer temperatures.
Keep refrigerated. For best whipping results, make sure the cream, bowl, and whisk are very cold.
FAQ
- Why won’t it whip?
- Chill cream and bowl; low-fat or warm cream won’t whip firmly.