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I am going to attempt to replicate a product. The product is a cold brew packet system. Contained in the package are two sachets, each with 2.15 oz of ground coffee.

My question is, should I interpret this number to be a volume or a mass?

A follow-up question, if it is a mass, what is a good household method to measure this small amount? (I don't own a triple beam).

Jason P Sallinger
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1 Answers1

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It's a weight.

It'd say fluid ounces if it meant fluid ounces, and fluid ounces are pretty much only used for liquid or liquid-ish things. Your package doesn't, and it's a solid, so seems pretty clear. Sometimes people are lazy about this in casual speech when it's clear it's a liquid, e.g. they'll say "a 20-ounce soda bottle", but even then the package will say fluid ounces, and in any case this isn't a liquid.

A kitchen scale is the best measurement method, and they're not that expensive and are useful for other things too. If you don't have one, I guess you could try to rig up a balance, and either use an existing 2.15 oz sachet or try to measure that much of something with a known density (e.g. water) by volume, but it's not going to be all that accurate. Measuring by volume is going to be hard for ground coffee, because the way it's ground affects the density a lot.

Cascabel
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  • My impression is that fluid ounces are generally used to refer to water-based liquids, and that volume measurements of solids skip from tablespoons to fractions of a cup (in American recipes). In hot white about oils. But this is an opinion formed from overseas where recipes expect cooks to own scales and use them for anything over a couple of tablespoons except liquids. +1 to you and to the OP: get some scales, they're worth it. – Chris H Apr 06 '17 at 20:46
  • Agreed with @Jefromi, this is a weight; [this article](http://drinks.seriouseats.com/2013/03/why-you-should-use-a-kitchen-scale-to-measure-coffee-coffee-brewing-equipment.html) on Serious Eats points out why using volume is a bad idea, but a (very rough) approximation for would be 1 oz = 16 tsp, according to [this chart](https://blackbearcoffee.com/resources/83) – Chris Macksey Apr 06 '17 at 23:31