Ingredient hub
Mirin
Mirin is a sweet Japanese rice wine that adds gloss and mild sweetness.
Use in teriyaki, glazes, braises, dressings, and to balance salty sauces.
What is Mirin?
Mirin is used as a measurable cooking ingredient where texture, moisture, and form affect weight more than appearance suggests. Volume tools are convenient, but the same scoop can drift depending on how the ingredient settles. This hub gives a clear weight-first reference so recipe scaling stays consistent.
Volume measurements can drift because settling, packing, and texture change the amount of ingredient inside the same spoon or cup. When gram values look surprising, structure is usually the reason rather than an error. Use the same fill method each time and verify by weight.
Chef note:Chef-level consistency starts when one reference cup is matched to a gram baseline.
Quick convert
- US cup = 236.588 mL
- 1 tbsp = 14.787 mL
- 1 tsp = 4.929 mL
Kitchen Conversion Chart
Cups, tbsp, tsp, mL and oz — all in one printable reference for oils, liquids, dairy and sauces.
Condiments
Viscous condiments like ketchup, BBQ sauce, or dips tend to cling stubbornly to measuring cups. This leads to waste and messy cleanup. Weighing directly into your dish or pan is the professional, clean, and accurate method.
Storage & tools
- Store in a cool, dry pantry (under 21 °C / 70 °F) away from direct sunlight.
- Use airtight containers to keep humidity out — dry ingredients gain 1–2 % mass in humid air.
- Rotate stock: first in, first out, even when the product looks unchanged.
- Check best-by dates; potency can fade before the product looks old.
Store sealed; refrigerate after opening to maintain flavor.