Cocoa, Dry Powder, Hi-Fat Or Breakfast, Processed With Alkali: How Many Grams in a Teaspoon?

Dutch-process (alkali-treated) high-fat cocoa powder is a fine, dark brown powder with a density of 0.406 g/ml. One US cup weighs approximately 96 g and one tablespoon about 6.0 g. The alkali treatment neutralizes the natural acidity of cocoa (raising pH from ~5.0 to ~7.0-8.0), producing a darker color, mellower flavor, and better solubility than natural cocoa. Its higher fat content (20-24% cocoa butter) gives it a richer mouthfeel. Used in European-style hot chocolate, dark chocolate cakes, ganache, and dusting for truffles. Because Dutch-process cocoa is chemically neutral, it pairs with baking powder rather than baking soda, making accurate measurement critical for leavening balance.

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

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Based on the measured density of Cocoa, Dry Powder, Hi-Fat Or Breakfast, Processed With Alkali (0.406 g/mL). Values rounded; real weight varies by brand, packing and temperature. Full sources in the tool on ChefSolver.

Reference table

tspg
12
24
36
48
510
612
714
816
918
1020
1122
1224
1326
1428
1530
2040
2550
3060

FAQ

Why does Dutch-process cocoa powder have a lower density than natural cocoa?
At 0.406 g/ml, Dutch-process hi-fat cocoa is comparable in density to natural cocoa (~0.40-0.45 g/ml). The alkali treatment does not significantly change particle density, but the higher fat content (20-24% vs 10-12% in standard cocoa) makes the powder slightly more prone to clumping, which can affect volumetric measurements. A cup varies from 90-105 g depending on how loosely the powder is scooped.
Can I substitute Dutch-process cocoa for natural cocoa by weight?
Gram-for-gram, yes, but you must adjust the leavening. Dutch-process cocoa (pH ~7-8) is neutral and requires baking powder, while natural cocoa (pH ~5) is acidic and activates baking soda. Swapping without adjusting leavening will produce a flat, dense baked good. The density difference is negligible at ~0.40 g/ml for both.
How much Dutch-process cocoa should I use for a rich hot chocolate?
For a single serving, use 2 tablespoons (~12 g at 0.406 g/ml) whisked into 240 ml of hot milk. The high-fat content (20-24% cocoa butter) creates a smoother, more luxurious drink than standard cocoa. The alkali treatment also improves solubility, reducing grittiness compared to natural cocoa at the same gram weight.

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