Dry to Cooked Pasta Calculator: Convert Dry Pasta to Cooked

🍝 Dry to Cooked Pasta Calculator

Convert dry pasta to cooked weight and volume for any pasta type and serving size

Quick Presets
🧮 Calculator
Cooked Weight
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oz
Cooked Volume
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cups
Per Person (cooked)
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oz per serving
Expansion Ratio
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dry to cooked
📊 Standard Cooked Yield (per 2 oz / 56g dry)
1 cup
Spaghetti
1.25 cups
Penne
1.5 cups
Elbow Mac
1.3 cups
Rotini
1 cup
Fettuccine
1.25 cups
Rigatoni
1.3 cups
Farfalle
1.4 cups
Shells
🍝 Dry vs Cooked Conversion by Weight
Pasta Type2 oz dry4 oz dry8 oz dry16 oz (1 lb) dry
Spaghetti / Linguine4 oz / 1 cup8 oz / 2 cups16 oz / 4 cups32 oz / 8 cups
Fettuccine4 oz / 1 cup8 oz / 2 cups16 oz / 4 cups32 oz / 8 cups
Angel Hair4 oz / 1 cup8 oz / 2 cups16 oz / 4 cups32 oz / 8 cups
Penne / Ziti5 oz / 1.25 cups10 oz / 2.5 cups20 oz / 5 cups40 oz / 10 cups
Rigatoni5 oz / 1.25 cups10 oz / 2.5 cups20 oz / 5 cups40 oz / 10 cups
Elbow Macaroni6 oz / 1.5 cups12 oz / 3 cups24 oz / 6 cups48 oz / 12 cups
Rotini / Fusilli5.2 oz / 1.3 cups10.4 oz / 2.6 cups20.8 oz / 5.2 cups41.6 oz / 10.4 cups
Farfalle (Bow Ties)5.2 oz / 1.3 cups10.4 oz / 2.6 cups20.8 oz / 5.2 cups41.6 oz / 10.4 cups
Medium Shells5.6 oz / 1.4 cups11.2 oz / 2.8 cups22.4 oz / 5.6 cups44.8 oz / 11.2 cups
Orzo4.8 oz / 1.2 cups9.6 oz / 2.4 cups19.2 oz / 4.8 cups38.4 oz / 9.6 cups
👥 How Much Dry Pasta Per Person?
ServingsDry Pasta (oz)Dry Pasta (grams)Cooked Weight (approx)
1 person (side dish)1.5 oz42g~3 oz
1 person (main dish)2 oz56g~4 oz
2 people4 oz113g~8 oz
4 people8 oz (1/2 lb)227g~16 oz
6 people12 oz340g~24 oz
8 people16 oz (1 lb)454g~32 oz
10 people20 oz567g~40 oz
12 people24 oz (1.5 lb)680g~48 oz
📝 Metric Conversion Reference
Dry PastaCooked WeightCooked VolumeServings
50g~100g~0.75 cup0.5 serving
75g~150g~1.1 cups~1 serving
100g~200g~1.5 cups~1.5 servings
200g~400g~3 cups~3 servings
250g~500g~3.75 cups~4 servings
500g~1000g~7.5 cups~8 servings
💡 Tip: Most dry pasta doubles in weight when fully cooked. A standard serving is 2 oz (56g) dry, which yields about 4 oz (113g) cooked pasta. Short pasta shapes like elbow macaroni and shells expand more in volume than long pasta like spaghetti.
💡 Tip: For pasta salads, cook slightly less time (al dente or firmer) since the pasta continues to absorb dressing. For baked dishes like lasagna or baked ziti, use pasta cooked about 2 minutes less than package directions, as it finishes cooking in the oven.
💡 Tip: To measure dry spaghetti without a scale, a bunch of dry spaghetti that fits in a circle the size of a quarter (about 1 inch / 2.5 cm diameter) equals roughly 2 oz (one serving). Use a kitchen scale for the most accurate results.

 

Pasta is made from dough from wheat flour, mixed with water or eggs, and formed in sheets or various shapes, then boiled or baked. Before people used only durum wheat for it. It comes in many shapes as penne, fusilli and spaghetti.

Spaghetti are long noodles. Shapes as spaghetti and penne always dominate the world of dried pasta

All About Pasta

Fresh pasta is easy to make. Simple recipe requires only four ingredients: flour, eggs, olive oil and salt. Another method mixes one part semolina, one part durum and two parts 00 flour, with one egg for every 100 grams flour, a bit of salt and warm water for the right feel.

Fresh pasta cooks more quickly than dried. The main differnece is the freshness. For decades families made pasta, first with knives on cutting tables, later with hand machines, now with Kitchen Aid devices.

It is work of love, that includes the whole family and children.

Two ounces dried pasta for each person works well as a rule. One serving usually is two ounces dried pasta, so around one cup after cooking. With little shapes as rigatoni or macaroni two ounces need care.

The pasta almost doubles while boiling, depending on the type. In Italy people commonly ask how many grams you want. Pasta is served as a first course, after that comes a second with meat, seafood or vegetables.

Pasta requires only some basic things. Boil it in a big pot with a lot of boiling water (not just quiet). The water must be salty.

Salt in pasta water matters really. Even a little mistake, as cooking too long, late adding or a bad pot, can destroy an Italian feast and turn it into a sad meal.

Costly pasta is pressed through bronze instead of teflon, which gives a rough surface, and the drying is more careful for good texture after cooking. There are also gluten free brands, but one serving of spaghetti carbonara has more than 900 calories. Almost no reasons exist to entirely avoid pasta except diet, allergy or diseases as Celiac disease.

Summer recipe includes cut cherry tomatoes, marinated for a while with olive oil, basil, garlic, salt and pepper. Later boil pasta and mix with grated parmesan. Whole wheat little shells work well with beans, because the beans slide inside.

Even tri-color spiral pasta becomes a favorite because it is colorful and has vegetables inside.

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