See all Self-Rising Flour conversions
Open the full ingredient guide for density notes, common cup weights, and the most-used conversion paths.
Self-Rising Flour ingredient guide →1 kg of self-rising flour = 2083 ml. That's based on a 113 g per cup baseline. Self-Rising Flour is also called self-raising flour in some recipes. Because self-rising flour can shift with scoop and compression, weighing is usually more accurate than measuring by volume.
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We have 2 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.
Self-Rising Flour ingredient guide →Start with All-Purpose Flour + Baking Powder + Salt using 1 cup all-purpose flour + 1 1/2 teaspoons baking powder + 1/4 teaspoon salt, then see the full substitute hub for more tested options.
Open Self-Rising Flour substitutions →Jump straight to the recipe-specific page for ratios and adjustment notes in cookies.
Self-Rising Flour substitute for cookies →| kg | ml |
|---|---|
| 0.10 kg | 208 ml |
| 1/4 kg | 521 ml |
| 1/2 kg | 1042 ml |
| 1 kg | 2083 ml |
Ingredient-specific, density-based conversions for baking
Self-Rising Flour is light and compressible, so volume measurements can move more than people expect.
Self-Rising 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.
Soft wheat flour blended with baking powder and salt, common in biscuits, pancakes, quick breads, and UK-style bakes. Use this conversion when scaling muffins, pancakes, cookies, and quick breads that use self-rising flour.
1 kg of self-rising flour is 2083 ml using a 113 g per cup baseline.
Self-Rising 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 self-rising flour = 113g. 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 226g, common range 198g-254g. If your bake is texture-sensitive, start with the lower bound and adjust after a test batch.