Walnuts (Halves)
Walnuts are the classic example of volumetric inaccuracy. Due to their irregular shape, walnut halves create massive air gaps in a measuring cup. A cup of whole halves can weigh 30% less than a cup of chopped nuts. Weighing is the only way to ensure your banana bread is rich and nutty, rather than dry or sparse.
Quick convert
- US cup = 236.588 mL
- 1 tbsp = 14.787 mL
- 1 tsp = 4.929 mL
Reference table
| mL | g |
|---|---|
| 10 | 5 |
| 25 | 12 |
| 50 | 24 |
| 75 | 35 |
| 100 | 47 |
Toast lightly for granola, pesto, brownies, or to finish roasted vegetables.
How this conversion works
Milliliters measure volume while grams measure weight. Because Walnuts (Halves) has a density of 0.47 g/mL, 10 mL weighs 5 g — not 10 g as it would for water. This converter uses the real density of Walnuts (Halves) 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.
Tired of converting?
Cooking like a pro requires precision. For consistent results, weigh your ingredients.
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FAQ
- Toasted vs. Raw: Does weight change?
- Slightly. Toasting removes moisture (making them lighter by ~3-5%), but boosts flavor immensely. Ideally, weigh them raw as listed in most recipes, then toast.
- Should I chop before or after measuring?
- This is the 'million dollar question' of volume recipes. '1 cup chopped walnuts' usually means chop THEN measure. '1 cup walnuts, chopped' means measure THEN chop. Using a scale (grams) eliminates this linguistic confusion entirely.