Hub ingrédient
Boissons, Thé, Noir, Prêt à boire
Ready-to-drink black tea is an unsweetened or minimally sweetened brewed black tea packaged for direct consumption. At 1.000 g/ml — exactly water density — this product has essentially no dissolved solids relative to water at standard measurement precision. A cup weighs approximately 237 g; a tablespoon weighs about 14.8 g. Like brewed coffee, it functions as a water substitute by gram weight in any recipe context. Used in tea-infused baked goods (Earl Grey cakes, chai pancakes), in braising liquids, and as a low-calorie beverage. If sweetened RTD tea is used instead, the density may rise to 1.04–1.06 g/ml due to added sugars.
Qu'est-ce que Boissons, Thé, Noir, Prêt à boire ?
Ready-to-drink black tea is an unsweetened or minimally sweetened brewed black tea packaged for direct consumption. At 1.000 g/ml — exactly water density — this product has essentially no dissolved solids relative to water at standard measurement precision. A cup weighs approximately 237 g; a tablespoon weighs about 14.8 g. Like brewed coffee, it functions as a water substitute by gram weight in any recipe context. Used in tea-infused baked goods (Earl Grey cakes, chai pancakes), in braising liquids, and as a low-calorie beverage. If sweetened RTD tea is used.
Les liquides n'ont pas tous le même poids que l'eau. Matières grasses, sucre et solides dissous modifient la densité, donc une tasse peut convertir au-dessus ou au-dessous d'une hypothèse aqueuse. Utilisez ces grammes basés sur la densité pour ajuster les recettes.
Note du chef:Les chefs ajustent les sauces au poids, car la densité modifie l'équilibre des saveurs.
Conversion rapide
- Tasse US = 236,588 mL
- 1 c. à soupe = 14,787 mL
- 1 c. à café = 4,929 mL
Tableau de conversion cuisine
Tasses, c. à soupe, c. à café, ml et oz — tout en un poster imprimable pour huiles, liquides, produits laitiers et sauces.
Boissons
Les boissons sucrées sont plus denses que l'eau. Convertir les volumes en grammes est le meilleur moyen de surveiller l'apport en sucre ou de réaliser des cocktails précis.
FAQ
- Why does ready-to-drink black tea have exactly water density?
- Unsweetened brewed tea contains only trace dissolved tannins, polyphenols, and caffeine — collectively less than 0.5 g per 237 ml cup. At such low concentrations, the density rounds to 1.000 g/ml at any practical measurement precision. The 1.000 value is the expected result for any nearly-pure water-based beverage.
- Does sweetened RTD tea weigh more than unsweetened per cup?
- Yes. Sweetened ready-to-drink teas typically contain 20–30 g of sugar per cup. Sugar (sucrose, ~1.59 g/ml) dissolved at these concentrations raises density to approximately 1.04–1.07 g/ml, adding 10–15 g per cup compared to unsweetened. Always check the nutrition label: if a tea has more than 5 g of sugar per serving, its density and gram weight will differ meaningfully from this unsweetened entry.