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Milk, Buttermilk, Fluid, Cultured, Lowfat: mL to Grams Conversion

Cultured lowfat buttermilk — the commercial version widely sold in cartons — is produced by fermenting lowfat milk (typically 1–2% fat) with lactic acid bacteria. Despite the name, it contains no butter and is thinner than sour cream or plain yogurt. At 1.036 g/ml, it is marginally denser than whole milk (1.031 g/ml) because the lower fat content leaves more dissolved water-soluble solids per unit volume. A cup weighs approximately 245 g; a tablespoon weighs about 15.3 g. Pourable like regular milk, with a tangy flavor. Its most important culinary role is its acidity: it reacts with baking soda to leaven biscuits, pancakes, cakes, and fried chicken coatings.

Quick convert

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

Reference table

Milk, Buttermilk, Fluid, Cultured, Lowfat — milliliters to grams
mLg
1010
2526
5052
7578
100104

How this conversion works

Milliliters measure volume while grams measure weight. Because Milk, Buttermilk, Fluid, Cultured, Lowfat has a density of 1.036 g/mL, 10 mL weighs 10 g — not 10 g as it would for water. This converter uses the real density of Milk, Buttermilk, Fluid, Cultured, Lowfat 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 is buttermilk slightly denser than whole milk?
Commercial lowfat buttermilk (1.036 g/ml) is denser than whole milk (1.031 g/ml) because it has less fat — and fat, at ~0.9 g/ml, is less dense than water. With less fat in the mixture, the remaining water-soluble milk solids push the overall density slightly higher. The difference is only about 1 g per cup — negligible for cooking.
Can I substitute regular milk for buttermilk by weight in baking?
By weight, the densities are close enough (1.036 vs 1.031 g/ml, <1% difference) that volume and gram substitutions are structurally equivalent. However, buttermilk's acidity is what triggers leavening when paired with baking soda. A functional substitute is 1 cup milk + 1 tablespoon lemon juice or vinegar, left to curdle — this replicates the acidity but not the protein composition.
How many grams is a cup of buttermilk?
At 1.036 g/ml, one cup (236.6 ml) of lowfat cultured buttermilk weighs approximately 245 g — the same as skim milk and about 1 g more than whole milk.

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