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Alcoholic Beverage, Beer, Light, Higher Alcohol: mL to Grams Conversion

Light beer with higher alcohol content is a pale, carbonated alcoholic beverage with a density of 1.003 g/ml, barely above water. One US cup weighs approximately 237 g and one tablespoon about 14.8 g. Despite being marketed as 'light' (fewer calories from reduced carbohydrates), the higher alcohol version typically contains 5-6% ABV rather than the 4-4.2% of standard light beer. It is used in beer-battered fish and chips, beer bread, cheese sauces (beer cheese dip), and as a braising liquid for sausages. The near-water density means it can substitute for water by weight in bread doughs where a subtle malty flavor is desired.

Quick convert

  • US cup = 236.588 mL
  • 1 tbsp = 14.787 mL
  • 1 tsp = 4.929 mL

Reference table

Alcoholic Beverage, Beer, Light, Higher Alcohol — milliliters to grams
mLg
1010
2525
5050
7575
100100

How this conversion works

Milliliters measure volume while grams measure weight. Because Alcoholic Beverage, Beer, Light, Higher Alcohol has a density of 1.003 g/mL, 10 mL weighs 10 g — not 10 g as it would for water. This converter uses the real density of Alcoholic Beverage, Beer, Light, Higher Alcohol so every measurement is accurate.

Measurement notes

Values are rounded to the nearest whole gram. Actual weight can vary slightly with compaction, temperature, and brand. For precision baking, a kitchen scale is always more reliable than volume measurements.

FAQ

Why does higher-alcohol light beer have a density so close to water?
At 1.003 g/ml, the density sits near water because two opposing forces nearly cancel out: ethanol (0.789 g/ml) lowers density while dissolved carbohydrates and residual sugars raise it. In light beer, the carbohydrate content is intentionally reduced (typically 3-6 g per 355 ml), so the net effect is a density almost identical to water.
Does the carbonation in beer affect how much a cup weighs?
Dissolved CO2 contributes negligible mass (about 0.3 g per 237 ml). However, foam and bubbles can cause underfilling when pouring into a measuring cup. For baking applications like beer bread, let the beer go flat first and weigh it: one cup of degassed light beer at 1.003 g/ml weighs approximately 237 g.
How does higher-alcohol light beer compare to regular beer for batter recipes?
Higher-alcohol light beer (1.003 g/ml, ~237 g/cup) is lighter than regular beer (~1.010-1.015 g/ml, ~240-242 g/cup) due to fewer dissolved carbohydrates. The lower sugar content produces a crispier batter because less sugar means less browning and less moisture retention. The higher alcohol evaporates faster during frying, creating more steam pockets for extra crunch.

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