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General Cooking (rec.food.cooking) For general food and cooking discussion. Foods of all kinds, food procurement, cooking methods and techniques, eating, etc. |
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On May 7, 10:31*am, Dave Smith > wrote:
> maxine in ri wrote: > > Was looking for a recipe for the rhubarb we got in our CSA last week, > > and came across one where the measurements were given in liters. > > > 2 liters chopped rhubarb > > 1 liter sugar <?> > > 20 ml ginger > > > I always thought that the rest of the world used weights to measure, > > not volume. > > > Discuss? > > Canada is officially metric, but most cookbooks still use Imperial > measure. It is easy enough to convert. A teaspoon in 5 ml and since > there are 3 tsp in a Tablespoon, that works out to 15 ml. > > A cup is roughly 250 ml. *Four cups in a quart, *4 X 250 ml is a litre. > > One Kg is a little more than 2 pounds. > > Can't understand why so many people resist metric. It makes a heck of a > lot more sense to use a system of measurement based on tens than the > cockamamie system where there are strange sets of fractions that make no > sense at all. Those were the assumptions I used to start with, but it just seemed odd to have the dry ingredients measured in liters. Or is it just something I'm not familiar with? maxine in ri |
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