See all Cake Flour conversions
Open the full ingredient guide for density notes, common cup weights, and the most-used conversion paths.
Cake Flour ingredient guide →1 gram of cake flour = 0.01 US cups. That's based on a 114 g per cup baseline. Because cake flour can shift with scoop and compression, weighing is usually more accurate than measuring by volume.
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We have 1 tested substitutions with exact ratios.
Find a substitute →Open the full ingredient guide for density notes, common cup weights, and the most-used conversion paths.
Cake Flour ingredient guide →Start with All-Purpose Flour + Cornstarch using For 1 cup cake flour: use 1 cup AP flour minus 2 tbsp, add 2 tbsp cornstarch, then see the full substitute hub for more tested options.
Open Cake Flour substitutions →Jump straight to the recipe-specific page for ratios and adjustment notes in cookies.
Cake Flour substitute for cookies →| grams | cups |
|---|---|
| 10 grams | 0.09 cups |
| 25 grams | 0.22 cups |
| 50 grams | 0.44 cups |
| 100 grams | 0.88 cups |
| 150 grams | 1.3 cups |
| 200 grams | 1.8 cups |
| 250 grams | 2.2 cups |
| 500 grams | 4.4 cups |
Ingredient-specific, density-based conversions for baking
Cake Flour is light and compressible, so volume measurements can move more than people expect.
Cake Flour is sensitive to scoop and compression differences. Even small volume errors can change batter thickness and crumb structure. Converting with a fixed baseline helps keep hydration and texture more consistent.
Low-protein, finely milled flour that produces tender, delicate cakes. Use this conversion when scaling muffins, pancakes, cookies, and quick breads that use cake flour.
1 gram of cake flour is 0.01 US cups using a 114 g per cup baseline.
Cake Flour is light and compressible, so volume measurements can move more than people expect. In practice, scoop and compression can shift results between kitchens.
Usually yes. Weight-based measuring reduces shifts from scoop and compression, so your results are more repeatable.
For cakes: use weight to avoid dense crumb from over-measuring.
For bread: control hydration by weighing flour and liquids together.
For cookies: 10-20g extra flour can reduce spread noticeably.
Baseline on this page: 1 cup cake flour = 114g. Real-world range can shift by about 12% because flours and grains compact differently based on scoop method, humidity, and grind fineness.
Example for 2 cups: baseline 228g, common range 200g-256g. If your bake is texture-sensitive, start with the lower bound and adjust after a test batch.