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Yogurt, Fruit, Low Fat,9 G Protein/8 Oz: mL to Grams Conversion

Low-fat fruit yogurt with 9 grams of protein per 8-ounce serving has a density of 1.036 g/ml, slightly above whole milk due to the combined effect of reduced fat, added fruit solids, and the thick gel structure formed by bacterial fermentation. One US cup weighs approximately 245 g and one tablespoon about 15.3 g. The low-fat designation means the milkfat content is between 0.5% and 2%, with fruit puree or concentrate adding sweetness, color, and additional dissolved solids that raise density above plain yogurt. The 9 g protein per 8 oz (227 g) serving reflects the concentrated casein and whey from the fermentation process. This product is commonly used as a breakfast food, smoothie base, or baking ingredient where its acidity activates baking soda for leavening.

Quick convert

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

Reference table

Yogurt, Fruit, Low Fat,9 G Protein/8 Oz — milliliters to grams
mLg
1010
2526
5052
7578
100104

How this conversion works

Milliliters measure volume while grams measure weight. Because Yogurt, Fruit, Low Fat,9 G Protein/8 Oz 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 Yogurt, Fruit, Low Fat,9 G Protein/8 Oz 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 fruit yogurt denser than whole milk despite being low-fat?
Removing fat (which is less dense than water at ~0.91 g/ml) and adding fruit solids (sugars, pectin, fiber -- all denser than water) both push the density upward. The bacterial fermentation also concentrates milk proteins. The net result is 1.036 g/ml compared to 1.031 g/ml for whole milk, a small but consistent difference that adds about 1 g per cup.
Can I substitute fruit yogurt for sour cream in baking by volume?
Not precisely by volume, because sour cream (~1.013 g/ml, ~240 g/cup) is lighter per cup than this yogurt (1.036 g/ml, ~245 g/cup). A cup of yogurt delivers about 5 g more mass. Additionally, yogurt has higher acidity and lower fat than sour cream, which affects both leavening chemistry and moisture balance. Substituting by weight and adjusting leavener is more reliable.

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