Ghee Milliliters to Grams
Snapshot
1 milliliter of ghee equals 0.93 grams. Conversion Encyclopedia keeps one fixed ingredient basis on this page so the calculator, common values, and reverse page stay aligned.
- Reference basis: 0.93 g/mL.
- Example: 50 mL = 46.5 g.
- Use the reverse page if you need the opposite direction with the same basis.
Use the interactive calculator below for custom values and the common-value table for quick checks.
Converter Calculator
Explanation
This page converts milliliters of ghee into grams using one ingredient-specific density estimate. The milliliter and cup versions stay aligned so you can switch measures without jumping between inconsistent charts.
That makes it useful when your workflow is volume-first but you need weight for prep or recipe consistency. That is especially useful for baking, pie crusts, traditional pastry, and savory doughs where the ingredient may be solid in the jar but measured as a liquid volume. Ghee changes behavior a lot between solid and melted states, so the page keeps one liquid-state basis instead of mixing scooped solids with poured volume.
Common Conversion Values
| Milliliters | Grams |
|---|---|
| 5 | 4.65 |
| 10 | 9.3 |
| 15 | 13.95 |
| 30 | 27.9 |
| 60 | 55.8 |
| 120 | 111.6 |
| 240 | 223.2 |
| 500 | 465 |
| 750 | 697.5 |
| 1,000 | 930 |
Frequently Asked Questions
How many grams are in 1 mL of Ghee?
Ghee is treated here as 0.93 g/mL, so 1 mL converts directly by that density-based factor.
Is this based on an ingredient-specific density estimate?
Yes. The page reduces the same 220 g-per-cup basis to a per-milliliter estimate for Ghee.
Does temperature or physical state change the result for Ghee?
Ghee keeps one liquid-state reference basis here, but the result assumes the ingredient is melted or fully liquid when measured. Solid pieces, scooped chunks, or semi-solid fills do not behave the same way in a cup.
How many grams are in 50 mL of Ghee?
50 mL of Ghee is 46.5 g based on the density reference for Ghee.
How do I convert Ghee grams back to milliliters?
Use the mirror Grams To Milliliters page; it applies the same density reference in reverse to return milliliters.