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Soup, Pea, Split With Ham, Canned, Condensed
Condensed split pea with ham soup is among the densest canned soups available, registering 1.141 g/ml in its concentrated form, which puts one cup at approximately 269.95 g and one tablespoon at about 16.87 g. The high density reflects the thick puree of cooked split peas combined with small ham pieces, creating a paste-like condensate that requires thorough stirring when reconstituted with water.
What is Soup, Pea, Split With Ham, Canned, Condensed?
Condensed split pea with ham soup is among the densest canned soups available, registering 1.141 g/ml in its concentrated form, which puts one cup at approximately 269.95 g and one tablespoon at about 16.87 g. The high density reflects the thick puree of cooked split peas combined with small ham pieces, creating a paste-like condensate that requires thorough stirring when reconstituted with water.
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.
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.
FAQ
- Why is condensed split pea with ham soup so much denser than other condensed soups?
- Split peas break down almost entirely into a starchy puree during cooking, leaving very little free water in the condensed product. Combined with the protein and fat from ham pieces, this creates a condensate with substantially more solids per unit volume than broth-based soups, pushing the density to 1.141 g/ml compared to the typical 1.04 to 1.07 range.
- Does the thick consistency of condensed split pea soup affect how it should be measured by volume?
- Yes, the paste-like texture can trap air pockets when scooped into a measuring cup, leading to inconsistent weights. For accurate recipe work, it helps to tap the measuring cup on the counter to settle the soup and eliminate voids, or weigh the soup directly using the 1.141 g/ml density as a reference.
- Can condensed split pea soup be used undiluted as a sauce or spread?
- The undiluted condensate works well as a thick base for savory dips or as a spread on crostini, since the pureed peas and ham already form a cohesive paste. Keep in mind that each tablespoon of the concentrate weighs nearly 17 g and carries proportionally concentrated sodium, so adjust seasoning when using it in this way.