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Knowing how to measure flour seems like it should be obvious, but it’s not. Learn how to measure flour the right way so your recipes come out perfect every time!
Table of Contents
Measuring Flour Video Tutorial
Why does how you measure flour matter?
I get comments on my dessert posts every day. Most comments are good, but some say that the recipe didn’t turn out. Whenever I get those comments I try to troubleshoot with the commenter because I want them to be able to enjoy the recipe as much as I did.
If you’re making a recipe and the batter ends up too crumbly and dry, chances are it’s because you aren’t measuring your flour correctly. You might be packing your flour (accidentally or unknowingly) and using too much, which results in a crumbly cookie dough.
If a cake falls or something ends up too dense, it could be how you’re measuring your flour, so knowing how to do it is very important.
How to measure flour without a scale
Ask yourself: are you SCOOPING or SPOONING your flour into the measuring cup?
If you’re scooping the flour, you might be using too much!
How to measure flour
- First you should fluff up the flour. If you haven’t used it a lot or it’s a new package, the flour is probably packed into the container. Use a fork to stir and fluff the flour.
- SPOON the flour into the measuring cup. (Make sure you’re using a measuring cup for dry ingredients.)
- Scrape off any excess flour with a straight edge, like the back of a knife.
The rule of thumb when you’re measuring flour: fluff up the flour in the bin then SPOON the flour into the cup.
SPOON, don’t scoop. Let’s make a song!
SPOON don’t scoop. Just make that your baking mantra.
Use a scale to measure flour
The professional way to measure flour is to weigh it using a scale. It’s the most accurate way, although most regular people don’t weigh their ingredients. I don’t normally weigh my flour because my readers don’t; I need to measure and cook things the way you do so that my recipes are accurate.
If you want to test how much flour you’re spooning or scooping, weigh it on a kitchen scale to test yourself.
1 cup of all-purpose flour weights 124 grams.
Scoop then spoon your flour, weigh it, and do a test for yourself!
A scale is the best way to measure flour, especially if you don’t have a measuring cup.
Do you have to sift flour?
The short answer is no, however that comes with a big caveat. If a recipe calls for sifted flour then you need to use it. If the recipe doesn’t call for it then it’s fine if you don’t BUT, remember the steps above. You should always fluff up your flour before measuring it.
Measuring sifted flour
- To properly measure sifted flour you sift THEN spoon the flour into the measuring cup.
The most important tip about how to measure flour is that you:
Do not pack your flour – ever.
Spoon the flour, don’t pack it, measure it correctly, and your recipes will turn out!
Looking for the best kitchen scale or measuring cups? Here are my favorites:
- OXO Kitchen Scale
- Stainless Measuring Cup and spoon set (any measuring cups are fine, but test them: cheap/decorative versions might not be correct)
Learn how to measure flour the right way so that every recipe comes out perfect! This crucial baking tip shows you the proper way to measure flour without a scale (or with one) for baking.
Have you made this recipe?
Tag @crazyforcrust on Instagram or hashtag it #crazyforcrust
I can’t find the recipe for the Russian snowball cookies. I don’t know how much of each item to use. Please help.
https://www.crazyforcrust.com/moms-russian-tea-cakes/
This was extremely informative. I recently starting baking more things from scratch and I was wondering why the quality of my sugar cookies were not consistent. Thank you! 🥰
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