1 cup of Allspice (ground) in grams

1 cup of allspice (ground) = 109 grams. That's based on a 110 g per cup baseline. Because allspice (ground) can shift with particle size and settling, weighing is usually more accurate than measuring by volume.

Reviewed by the CupOrGram Editorial TeamSources: King Arthur Baking, USDA FoodData Central, in-house testingMethodology
Answer
109 grams
Based on allspice (ground) density of 0.46 g/ml
Sources: King Arthur Baking, USDA FoodData Central, in-house testing
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Ingredient Guide

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Quick Reference Table

cupsgrams
1/4 cups28.0 grams
1/3 cups36.0 grams
1/2 cups55.0 grams
1 cups110 grams
1.50 cups165 grams
2 cups220 grams
3 cups330 grams
4 cups440 grams
Figures use the US cup (236.6 ml).

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Ingredient-specific, density-based conversions for baking

1 cups of Allspice (ground) equals 109 grams
Ingredient-specific · density-based
Cup size

Why this conversion varies

Allspice (ground) is light and easily compacted, so small measuring differences matter.

  • Particle size changes how the spice settles in spoons and cups.
  • Freshness and brand processing can change bulk density.
  • This page uses a consistent 110 g per cup baseline for repeatable conversions.

Why this conversion matters

Allspice (ground) can behave differently by brand and handling. Converting allspice (ground) with a consistent baseline gives you a more dependable starting point for scaling recipes.

Practical baking use

Ground dried berries of the Pimenta dioica tree. Not a blend — its name comes from tasting like a mix of cinnamon, nutmeg, and clove. Use this conversion as a practical starting point for scaling recipes with allspice (ground).

  • If consistency matters, verify with a small test batch first.
  • Use weight-based measurements when precision is critical.

FAQ

How much is 1 cup of allspice (ground) in grams?

1 cup of allspice (ground) is 109 grams using a 110 g per cup baseline.

Why can allspice (ground) conversions shift even with the same spoon size?

Allspice (ground) is light and easily compacted, so small measuring differences matter. In practice, particle size and settling can shift results between kitchens.

Is it better to weigh allspice (ground) for baking?

Usually yes. Weight-based measuring reduces shifts from particle size and settling, so your results are more repeatable.

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Recipe Context for Allspice (ground)

For spice cakes: over-measuring can create bitterness quickly.

For cookies: spice potency changes by brand and age.

For blends: weight helps maintain repeatable flavor profile.

Common Pitfalls

  • Switching brands without re-checking weight can change texture and bake time.
  • Using volume-only measurements for dense ingredients can overshoot recipe targets.

Brand Variance Example

Baseline on this page: 1 cup allspice (ground) = 110g. Real-world range can shift by about 10% because particle size and settling vary across brands and freshness windows.

Example for 2 cups: baseline 220g, common range 198g-242g. If your bake is texture-sensitive, start with the lower bound and adjust after a test batch.

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