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MEASURING TOOLS AND HOW TO MEASURE
25

LT: Too much or too little of an ingredient = big difference in product outcome Learn: Which tool to use How to use meas. tools CORRECTLY.

Dec 23, 2015

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Abner Hudson
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Page 1: LT:  Too much or too little of an ingredient = big difference in product outcome  Learn: Which tool to use How to use meas. tools CORRECTLY.

MEASURING TOOLS AND

HOW TO MEASURE

Page 2: LT:  Too much or too little of an ingredient = big difference in product outcome  Learn: Which tool to use How to use meas. tools CORRECTLY.

LT:

Too much or too little of an ingredient = big difference in product outcome

Learn:Which tool to useHow to use meas. tools CORRECTLY

Page 3: LT:  Too much or too little of an ingredient = big difference in product outcome  Learn: Which tool to use How to use meas. tools CORRECTLY.

Essential Question

Why use standardized recipes? What are the parts of a recipe and what

does each part tell us? Why use standardized weights and

measures? What can happen if we fail to measure

correctly and accurately?

Page 4: LT:  Too much or too little of an ingredient = big difference in product outcome  Learn: Which tool to use How to use meas. tools CORRECTLY.

Standard

ACF Standard 5

Page 5: LT:  Too much or too little of an ingredient = big difference in product outcome  Learn: Which tool to use How to use meas. tools CORRECTLY.

Why use a standard system for measurement?

US standard system (or customary) system for measurements.

Accepted definition for each measurement.

Ex: Tablespoon made by Kitchenaid will measure the same as a Tablespoon made by The Pampered Chef.

Page 6: LT:  Too much or too little of an ingredient = big difference in product outcome  Learn: Which tool to use How to use meas. tools CORRECTLY.

What are the different measurement tools?

Measure by various units:Volume (how much space something takes

up)Weight (how heavy something is). Temperature Length

Page 7: LT:  Too much or too little of an ingredient = big difference in product outcome  Learn: Which tool to use How to use meas. tools CORRECTLY.

Volume: Dry Measuring Cups Dry ingredients such as flour, sugar,

brown sugar, nuts or chocolate chips. Solid ingredients such as mayonnaise,

sour cream, or peanut butter

Page 8: LT:  Too much or too little of an ingredient = big difference in product outcome  Learn: Which tool to use How to use meas. tools CORRECTLY.

Dry Measuring Cups

Standard set = 4 cups1 Cup ,1/2 cup, 1/3 cup, 1/4 cup

Page 9: LT:  Too much or too little of an ingredient = big difference in product outcome  Learn: Which tool to use How to use meas. tools CORRECTLY.

Heaping vs. LevelUnless asked for heaping, assume all

recipes call for LEVEL measurements.

HEAPING LEVEL

Page 10: LT:  Too much or too little of an ingredient = big difference in product outcome  Learn: Which tool to use How to use meas. tools CORRECTLY.

How to Measure Dry Ingredients

Hold the cup over waxed paper or the ingredient’s container.If any spills over, you can return it to the

container. Fill the cup slightly over the top.

DO NOT shaker or tap cup to make more room. You are putting in MORE than you need.

Use a straight edge to level off the top of the cup.

Page 11: LT:  Too much or too little of an ingredient = big difference in product outcome  Learn: Which tool to use How to use meas. tools CORRECTLY.

SCOOP IN

-LEVEL OFF

Page 12: LT:  Too much or too little of an ingredient = big difference in product outcome  Learn: Which tool to use How to use meas. tools CORRECTLY.

How to Measure Brown Sugar Scoop in brown sugar Pack sugar firmly into cup. It should

overfill the cup. Level off. You know you did it correctly because

the b. sugar will hold the shape of the measuring tool. (Like a sand castle)

Page 13: LT:  Too much or too little of an ingredient = big difference in product outcome  Learn: Which tool to use How to use meas. tools CORRECTLY.

How to Measure Solid Ingredients

Scoop in Pack down Level off

Page 14: LT:  Too much or too little of an ingredient = big difference in product outcome  Learn: Which tool to use How to use meas. tools CORRECTLY.

Volume: Liquid Measuring Cups

Liquid ingredients such as water, oil, milk, shoyu or vanilla extract.

Page 15: LT:  Too much or too little of an ingredient = big difference in product outcome  Learn: Which tool to use How to use meas. tools CORRECTLY.

Liquid Measuring Cup

Usually clear Has a pouring spout Space at the top of the cup to prevent

spills.

Page 16: LT:  Too much or too little of an ingredient = big difference in product outcome  Learn: Which tool to use How to use meas. tools CORRECTLY.

How to Measure Liquid Ingredients

Place cup on a flat, even surface Slowly pour the liquid into the cup Stoop down to check the measurement

at eye levelDO NOT raise cup to eye level. You will not

get an accurate measurement.

Page 17: LT:  Too much or too little of an ingredient = big difference in product outcome  Learn: Which tool to use How to use meas. tools CORRECTLY.

Measuring Liquid Ingredients

YES! NO!

Page 18: LT:  Too much or too little of an ingredient = big difference in product outcome  Learn: Which tool to use How to use meas. tools CORRECTLY.

Volume: Measuring Spoons Can measure dry, solid or liquid

ingredients SMALL Amounts: Salt, pepper, vanilla

extract, baking powder

Page 19: LT:  Too much or too little of an ingredient = big difference in product outcome  Learn: Which tool to use How to use meas. tools CORRECTLY.

Measuring Spoons

Standard set = 4 spoons 1 Tablespoon 1 teaspoon ½ teaspoon ¼ teaspoon

Page 20: LT:  Too much or too little of an ingredient = big difference in product outcome  Learn: Which tool to use How to use meas. tools CORRECTLY.

How to measure SMALL Amounts DO NOT measure over mixing bowl Measure same as:

Dry – scoop in level offSolid/B. Sugar – scoop in, pack down, level

offLiquid – up to rim or edge

Page 21: LT:  Too much or too little of an ingredient = big difference in product outcome  Learn: Which tool to use How to use meas. tools CORRECTLY.

Weight: Portion Scale

Used for greater accuracy – especially in baking

Can weigh by Ounces or by Pounds

Page 22: LT:  Too much or too little of an ingredient = big difference in product outcome  Learn: Which tool to use How to use meas. tools CORRECTLY.

How to use a portion scale Place mixing bowl or other container on

scale “Zero out” the scale by moving the knob

so the line points to zero Begin placing ingredient in bowl Measure to amount needed

Page 23: LT:  Too much or too little of an ingredient = big difference in product outcome  Learn: Which tool to use How to use meas. tools CORRECTLY.

How to read a portion scale in ounces

10

1/4

1/2 3/4

Page 24: LT:  Too much or too little of an ingredient = big difference in product outcome  Learn: Which tool to use How to use meas. tools CORRECTLY.

How to read portion scale in pounds

0

4

8 12

1

Numbers in blue are OUNCES. This is 1 #, 12 oz or 1 ¾ #

4

812

2

Page 25: LT:  Too much or too little of an ingredient = big difference in product outcome  Learn: Which tool to use How to use meas. tools CORRECTLY.

Mesaurements you just need to memorize 3 tsp = Tbsp 16 T = 1 Cup = 8 oz 2 c = 1 pt, 2 pt = 1 qt., 4 qt = 1 gal 1 block butter = 2 cups = 1 lb

DRAW a PICTURE if you need to