AbraCalc

Kitchen Conversion Wall Chart

A clean, printable kitchen conversion poster covering cup and spoon volumes, ounce-to-gram weights, oven temperatures in Fahrenheit, Celsius, and gas mark, and common ingredient cup-to-gram weights for the fridge.

Built by the AbraCalc team

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How to play

  1. Choose US or metric emphasis to decide which unit leads each table.
  2. Pick compact or large type depending on how far you'll be reading it from.
  3. Scan the five reference tables: volumes, spoon sizes, weights, oven temperatures, and ingredient densities.
  4. Click Print chart to get a single clean page, ready for the fridge or a cabinet door.

Every kitchen needs one chart taped to the inside of a cabinet door: this is that chart. It lays out cup, tablespoon, and teaspoon volumes with their milliliter equivalents, spoon sizes down to a quarter teaspoon, ounce-to-gram weight conversions, a full oven temperature table pairing Fahrenheit, Celsius, and gas mark, and gram weights for a dozen common baking ingredients like flour, sugar, and butter measured by the cup. Switch between US and metric emphasis to put the units you use most in the left column, and pick compact or large type depending on how the printed page will be read. Every number is a fixed reference value, not something you calculate, so there's nothing to type or upload; the whole poster is generated and ready to print in one look. Click print to get a single clean page sized to fit on a fridge or inside a cabinet.

Frequently asked questions

How is this different from the cooking volume converter?
The cooking volume converter is an interactive tool where you type in one amount and get a live converted result for a single unit pair. This wall chart is a static, printable reference poster showing every common conversion at once, meant to be printed and kept nearby rather than typed into.
Where do the ingredient weight values come from?
The gram-per-cup figures for ingredients like flour, sugar, and butter follow standard baking references used by professional recipe testing, since ingredient density varies by how it's scooped or packed and these are the commonly accepted averages.
Will the chart still fit on one printed page?
Yes. The print layout removes all on-screen controls and headers and lays the five tables out in a compact grid sized to fit a single page at a normal print margin, whether you choose compact or large type.