Latte, secco, scremato, normale, senza aggiunta di vitamina A e vitamina D: da mL a grammi (conversione)
Dry nonfat milk powder is produced by spray-drying skim milk into fine particles. As a dry ingredient, its bulk density of 0.507 g/ml is typical for fine dairy powders — similar to dried buttermilk powder — but far lighter than the liquid milk it reconstitutes to. A tablespoon weighs approximately 7.6 g; a cup weighs approximately 120 g. When packed firmly, a cup can weigh 130–140 g due to moderate compaction. Used in baking to add protein, dairy solids, and browning potential without adding liquid. Reconstitution ratio: approximately 1/3 cup powder + 1 cup water ≈ 1 cup fluid skim milk. This entry measures the dry powder, not the reconstituted liquid.
Convertitore rapido
- Cup statunitense = 236,588 mL
- 1 cucchiaio = 14,787 mL
- 1 cucchiaino = 4,929 mL
Tabella di riferimento
| mL | g |
|---|---|
| 10 | 5 |
| 25 | 13 |
| 50 | 25 |
| 75 | 38 |
| 100 | 51 |
Come funziona questa conversione
I millilitri misurano il volume, i grammi il peso. Poiché Latte, secco, scremato, normale, senza aggiunta di vitamina A e vitamina D ha una densità di 0.507 g/mL, 10 mL pesano 5 g — non 10 g come per l'acqua. Questo convertitore usa la densità reale di Latte, secco, scremato, normale, senza aggiunta di vitamina A e vitamina D per un risultato preciso.
Note sulla misurazione
I valori sono arrotondati al grammo più vicino. Il peso effettivo può variare leggermente per compattazione, temperatura e marca. Per la pasticceria di precisione, una bilancia da cucina è sempre più affidabile delle misure a volume.
Domande frequenti
- How many grams is a tablespoon of dry milk powder?
- At 0.507 g/ml bulk density, one tablespoon (about 14.79 ml) of dry nonfat milk powder weighs approximately 7.6 g. Most recipes that use milk powder specify tablespoons or cups — knowing the gram weight per tablespoon lets you scale by weight for consistency.
- Does packing affect the gram weight of dry milk powder?
- Moderately. Dry milk powder can compact to roughly 10–15% more mass per cup if the container has been jostled or stored for a long time. For baking recipes where the ratio matters — particularly when milk powder is used to adjust protein or lactose content — weighing by grams is more reliable than scooping by cup.
- How does the density of dry milk powder compare to the reconstituted liquid milk?
- The powder (0.507 g/ml bulk density) and the reconstituted milk (1.031–1.036 g/ml) are completely different in density. The powder is a compressed form of what was mostly water — once dissolved in water, the density returns to near-milk levels. 1/3 cup (about 40 g) of powder reconstituted with 1 cup water yields approximately 1 cup of skim milk.