Boissons, préparation pour cacao en poudre, à préparer avec de l'eau : combien de grammes dans une tasse ?
Hot cocoa prepared from powder mix with water is a warm, sweetened chocolate beverage with a density of 1.160 g/ml, significantly heavier than water due to its high dissolved sugar and milk solids content. One US cup weighs approximately 274 g and one tablespoon about 17.2 g. The prepared drink has a smooth, moderately thick consistency. It is consumed as a comforting winter beverage and used in baking as a flavoring liquid for chocolate bread pudding, in ganache-style glazes, and as a moisture source in chocolate mug cakes. Weighing the prepared drink rather than measuring by volume is important for recipes where the sugar concentration affects texture.
Quick convert
- Tasse US = 236,588 mL
- 1 c. à soupe = 14,787 mL
- 1 c. à café = 4,929 mL
Table de référence
| Tasses | g |
|---|---|
| 0.3 | 69 |
| 0.5 | 137 |
| 0.8 | 206 |
| 1.0 | 274 |
| 1.5 | 412 |
| 2.0 | 549 |
Questions fréquentes
- Why is prepared hot cocoa so much denser than brewed coffee or tea?
- At 1.160 g/ml, prepared hot cocoa contains approximately 25-30 g of dissolved sugar and 5-10 g of milk solids per cup from the cocoa mix powder. These dissolved solids raise the density far above water (1.000 g/ml) and brewed coffee (1.002 g/ml). A cup of hot cocoa weighs about 274 g, nearly 37 g more than a cup of water.
- Does the amount of water used to prepare hot cocoa change the density?
- Yes, significantly. The USDA value (1.160 g/ml) reflects standard preparation at the ratio specified on the package. Using more water dilutes the dissolved solids and lowers density toward 1.0 g/ml. Using less water creates a thicker, denser drink. For consistent recipe results, always prepare at the package ratio and weigh the finished drink.
- Can I use prepared hot cocoa as a substitute for milk in baking?
- It can work in chocolate recipes, but prepared hot cocoa (1.160 g/ml, ~274 g/cup) is denser than whole milk (1.03 g/ml, ~244 g/cup) and contains much more sugar. Substituting by volume would add about 30 g of extra mass and 20-25 g of extra sugar per cup. Substitute by weight and reduce recipe sugar accordingly.