Unit Definitions
What is a Cup (US)?
A cup is a unit of volume in the US customary and imperial measurement systems, primarily used in cooking and baking. The US customary cup is defined as exactly 236.5882365 milliliters (approximately 237 ml), equal to 8 US fluid ounces, ½ US pint, or ¼ US quart. The metric cup, used in Australia, Canada, and other countries, is defined as exactly 250 milliliters, slightly larger than the US cup.
The cup is one of the most frequently used volume measurements in American cooking. Dry ingredients like flour, sugar, and oats as well as liquids like water, milk, and oil are commonly measured in cups. Because the cup is a volume unit rather than a weight unit, the mass of a cup of an ingredient varies significantly depending on the density of that ingredient.
It is important to note that there are several different "cups" in use internationally: the US customary cup (236.6 ml), the US legal cup used in food labeling (240 ml), the metric cup (250 ml), and the imperial cup (284.1 ml). When following international recipes, clarifying which cup standard is being used can be important.
What is a Milliliter?
A milliliter (symbol: ml or mL) is a metric unit of volume equal to one one-thousandth of a liter (0.001 L). It is part of the International System of Units (SI) and is equivalent to one cubic centimeter (1 cm³ = 1 ml). One milliliter of water has a mass of approximately one gram at standard temperature and pressure, reflecting the elegant relationship between metric units of volume and mass.
The milliliter is one of the most widely used units of volume for liquids in everyday life worldwide. Beverages, medicines, cosmetics, and laboratory solutions are routinely measured and labeled in milliliters. The milliliter provides a practical scale for volumes too small to express conveniently in liters but too large to require microliters.
In cooking, the milliliter is the standard unit for liquid measurements in countries that use the metric system. European and Australian recipes specify liquid ingredients in milliliters, while US recipes use cups and fluid ounces — making ml-to-cup conversion one of the most common cooking measurement conversions globally.
History and Origin
The Cup (US)'s History
The cup as a cooking measurement emerged in American culinary practice in the 19th century. Fannie Farmer, the influential American cookbook author, is widely credited with popularizing standardized cup measurements in her 1896 "Boston Cooking-School Cook Book." Before standardization, recipes used imprecise terms like "a teacup" or "a coffee cup," which varied widely in size.
The US customary cup was standardized as 8 fluid ounces, and standardized measuring cups became widely available as kitchen tools in the early 20th century. This standardization transformed cooking from an art requiring experience and judgment to a more precise, reproducible activity accessible to home cooks without professional training.
The Milliliter's History
The milliliter was introduced as part of the French metric system in the late 18th century, defined as one one-thousandth of a liter. The liter itself was originally defined as the volume of one kilogram of water, establishing the fundamental link between metric units of mass and volume. This relationship made the milliliter a natural unit for pharmaceutical and scientific applications where mass-volume equivalences are important.
The milliliter has been part of the International System of Units (SI) since its formalization, though the SI technically recognizes the liter as a non-SI unit accepted for use with SI, making the milliliter equally accepted. The symbol "mL" (with capital L) was adopted to avoid confusion with the numeral "1" in some typefaces.