✂️ Halving Recipe Calculator
Enter your ingredients and instantly get perfectly halved amounts in imperial & metric
| Ingredient Name | Amount | Unit | Type |
|---|
| Original Amount | Halved (Imperial) | Original (Metric) | Halved (Metric) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 cup | ½ cup | 240 ml | 120 ml |
| ¾ cup | 6 tbsp | 180 ml | 90 ml |
| ⅔ cup | ⅓ cup | 160 ml | 80 ml |
| ½ cup | ¼ cup | 120 ml | 60 ml |
| ⅓ cup | 2 tbsp + 2 tsp | 80 ml | 40 ml |
| ¼ cup | 2 tbsp | 60 ml | 30 ml |
| 1 tbsp | 1½ tsp | 15 ml | 7.5 ml |
| 1 tsp | ½ tsp | 5 ml | 2.5 ml |
| ½ tsp | ¼ tsp | 2.5 ml | 1.25 ml |
| ¼ tsp | ⅛ tsp | 1.25 ml | 0.6 ml |
| 1 lb | 8 oz | 454 g | 227 g |
| 8 oz | 4 oz | 227 g | 113 g |
| 4 oz | 2 oz | 113 g | 56 g |
| Ingredient | Original | Halved Amount | Special Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Whole Egg | 1 egg | 1 egg yolk only | Or beat & use 1.5 tbsp |
| Whole Egg | 2 eggs | 1 whole egg | No adjustment needed |
| Egg White | 1 white | Approx. 1.5 tbsp | Beat & measure |
| Baking Powder | 1 tsp | ½ tsp (not less) | Don’t reduce further |
| Baking Soda | 1 tsp | ½ tsp | Exact halving fine |
| Salt | 1 tsp | ½ tsp then taste | Adjust to preference |
| Yeast (active dry) | 1 packet (7g) | 1¼ tsp (3.5g) | Rise time same |
| Vanilla Extract | 1 tsp | ½ tsp | Can add a touch more |
| Butter (sticks) | 1 stick (½ cup) | ¼ cup / 4 tbsp | 57 g |
| Cream Cheese | 8 oz block | 4 oz (½ block) | 115 g |
| Original Pan | Recommended Half Pan | Volume Difference | Bake Time Adjustment |
|---|---|---|---|
| 9x13 inch (3.5 qt) | 8x8 or 9x9 inch | ~50% smaller | Check 5–10 min early |
| Two 9-inch rounds | One 9-inch round | Same depth | Same bake time |
| 12-cup muffin tin | 6-cup muffin tin | Exact half | Same bake time |
| 10-inch Bundt (12 cup) | 6-cup Bundt pan | ~50% smaller | Reduce 10–15 min |
| 9x5 loaf pan | 8x4 loaf pan | ~40% smaller | Check 10 min early |
| 10-inch springform | 7-inch springform | ~50% smaller | Check 10 min early |
Recipes arrive in all forms and sizes, from fast weekly dinners to creative French tarts. For instance the tart with mushrooms is made from simple puff pastry covered with melted Gruyère and sautéed mushrooms, later cooked until crisp and golden. That creates a similar idea as simple apple tart, only in savory style.
In French one calls it “Tarte Bonne or Champignons” for those that want to sound learned.
Easy Recipes, Quick Meals and Serving Sizes
Some recipes spread quickly through the net. The “Marry Me” chicken became a mainstream online success after its spread through TikTok. It even received attention from The New York Times and became their most favorite recipe in 2023.
Such results show how one good dish can win its own lief.
Always folks need fast meals. One can prepare kebabs in only 25 minutes. One version uses seasoned ground beef, served on cooled yoghurt.
It draws from Iranian tradition and shows how kebabs of various kinds spread through Africa. Besides that, creamy white beans with flavors of cacio e pepe cook in 20 minutes with only four ingredients. That creates a comfortable weekly evening meal.
The Basque cheesecake deserves attention. It has a burnt surface, creamy interior and simplicity, coming from San Sebastián in Spain. Although many versions already appeared, always stays room four new ideas.
Creating a recipe from nothing takes real work. That includes making the meal many times, changing parts that need fixing, retrying and noting every stage so that the result can be repeated. Watching episodes of “Claire Saffitz” in the series “Gourmet Makes” on the YouTube channel of Bon Appétit helps to see that process live.
Even so not every recipe receives praise. One famous author met criticism because of a recipe for salmon, that was made up of only microwaved fish without any spices. One considered that method a true cooking sin.
Scaling recipes forms a common problem. Recipes commonly say “for six servings” or “for eight servings“. One way is to weigh the whole meal and later share according to the number of servings.
Tools for recipes help multiply or share amounts of ingredients. Programs for serving size allow you to enter original and wanted number of servings, and the right multiplier calculates itself. Smart fraction calculators round decimals to the nearest usual cooking fractions, like half or quarter, which works better for home cooks.
Because in baking precise measurement matters, one can turn off fraction rounding to get exact decimals.
For things that deal with brownie glazes or cheesecakes, the splitting simplifies to cutting every bit in equal size. Some programs even suggestserving sizes according to the kind of food, the household and their ages.
