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Yogurt, Fruit Variety, Nonfat, Fortified With Vitamin D: mL to Grams Conversion

Fruit variety nonfat yogurt fortified with vitamin D is a fat-free cultured dairy product blended with assorted fruit purees, with a density of 1.036 g/ml. One US cup weighs approximately 245 g and one tablespoon about 15.3 g. The vitamin D fortification (typically 15-20% of the daily value per serving) addresses a common dietary gap. This yogurt is used in smoothie bowls, as a topping for granola, mixed into overnight oats, and as a low-calorie base for fruit-flavored frozen desserts. Weighing ensures consistent calorie and nutrient tracking across servings.

Quick convert

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

Reference table

Yogurt, Fruit Variety, Nonfat, Fortified With Vitamin D — milliliters to grams
mLg
1010
2526
5052
7578
100104

How this conversion works

Milliliters measure volume while grams measure weight. Because Yogurt, Fruit Variety, Nonfat, Fortified With Vitamin D 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 Variety, Nonfat, Fortified With Vitamin D 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

Does vitamin D fortification change the density or weight of this yogurt?
No. Vitamin D is added in microgram quantities (2.5-3 micrograms per serving), which is far too small to affect the density of 1.036 g/ml. The fortified and unfortified versions weigh identically at approximately 245 g per cup. The vitamin D is fat-soluble but dispersed in the dairy matrix at negligible concentrations.
How does fruit variety nonfat yogurt compare to plain nonfat yogurt for baking?
Both share the same density of 1.036 g/ml (~245 g/cup), but fruit variety yogurt contains 10-15 g more sugar per serving from the fruit puree and added sweeteners. In baking, this extra sugar will accelerate browning and add moisture. Reduce other sweeteners in the recipe by 1-2 tablespoons per cup of fruit yogurt used.
Why are so many nonfat yogurts fortified with vitamin D?
Vitamin D is naturally present in milk fat, so removing fat to make nonfat yogurt also removes most of the vitamin D. Fortification restores this nutrient. A 245 g cup of this yogurt typically provides 2.5-3 mcg of vitamin D, comparable to what a cup of whole-milk yogurt would contain naturally.

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