Roux Ratio Calculator: Perfect Flour to Fat Every Time

🥄 Roux Ratio Calculator

Calculate the exact flour-to-fat ratio for any roux type & quantity

Quick Presets
🧮 Calculator Inputs
📊 Your Roux Results
💡 Pro Tip: The classic roux is always a 1:1 ratio by weight of flour to fat. Darker roux have less thickening power because heat breaks down the starch — a dark roux needs about 30% more quantity to achieve the same thickness as a white roux.
📋 Roux Type Reference Chart
Roux Type Cook Time Color Thickening Power Common Use
White Roux 2–3 min Pale ivory 100% (highest) Bechamel, Mac & Cheese
Blonde Roux 5–7 min Light tan ~80% Veloute, Cream soups
Brown Roux 8–12 min Nut brown ~60% Gravies, Espagnole
Dark/Black Roux 20–45 min Dark brown ~30% (lowest) Gumbo, Cajun dishes
🧄 Roux Thickening Guide (per 1 cup / 240ml liquid)
Sauce Consistency Flour (imperial) Fat (imperial) Flour (metric) Fat (metric)
Light / Thin 1 tsp 1 tsp 4g 4g
Medium / Coating 1 tbsp 1 tbsp 8g 8g
Thick / Heavy 2 tbsp 2 tbsp 16g 16g
Very Thick / Paste 3 tbsp 3 tbsp 24g 24g
🍞 Flour Measurement Conversions
Imperial Grams (All-Purpose) Tablespoons Cups
1 tsp2.6g0.33 tbsp0.021 cups
1 tbsp7.8g1 tbsp0.063 cups
¼ cup31g4 tbsp0.25 cups
½ cup63g8 tbsp0.5 cups
1 cup125g16 tbsp1 cup
1 oz28.3g3.63 tbsp0.227 cups
🧈 Fat Measurement Conversions
Fat Type 1 tbsp Weight 1 cup Weight Notes
Butter (unsalted)14.2g227gMost common
Ghee13.6g218gHigher smoke point
Vegetable Oil13.6g218gNeutral flavor
Lard / Bacon Fat12.8g205gTraditional Cajun
Margarine14.2g227gSame as butter
📊 Roux Nutrition Facts (per 2 tbsp / 30g white roux)
110
Calories
7g
Total Fat
9g
Carbs
1.5g
Protein
4.5g
Saturated Fat
18mg
Cholesterol
0.3g
Fiber
55mg
Sodium
⚖️ Weight vs. Volume: For best accuracy, use a kitchen scale. Volume measurements can vary up to 20% depending on how flour is scooped. The 1:1 ratio refers to weight, not volume — butter is slightly heavier per tablespoon than flour.

Roux is made up of flour and fat that is cooked together. One uses it to thicken sauces, soups and stuffings. The main idea is easy: we mix equal parts of flour and fat by weight cook them together and use the result to give thicker and smooth texture to foods.

Butter commonly serves as fat, but oil, pork fat or bacon also works well.

Roux: What It Is and How to Make It

To prepare roux, one melts butter or fat in a pan. Then one adds flour and mixes until it is smooth. The mix cooks on low to medium flame, until it gets the wanted color.

This way one avoids lumps when one mixes the flour base into liquids, which is needed for gravy or creamy sauces.

Roux have various levels based on the cooking time. White roux one cooks only briefly, and it works for sauces, soups and stuffings that do not need brown color. Blond roux one uses for velouté.

Brown roux gives deeper colour and taste to dishes. In French kitchen one mostly keeps it light (white), blond or light brown, commonly with butter as fat. In southern cooking, especially in Cajun and Creole styles, one browns it much more, which adds roasted, nutty flavor too the foods.

Dark roux should have taste like brown toast but no burning. It also should smell like this. For deeper browning, oil or another pure fat like pork fat or clarified butter works better than full butter.

The milk bits in normal butter easily burn before the roux quite a lot darkens.

Making roux requires patience. Deep brown roux can take half an hour or even more, with constant stirring. If it starts to smell burned, one dumps it.

Some methods involve browning the flour in an oven instead of on a stove.

Roux forms a basic part in many traditional foods. With milk it creates béchamel, and with broth velouté. All those sauces have hundreds of variations.

Also roux adds gentle nut taste, not only thickens. It is the heart of gumbo and works well in macaroni with cheese.

Roux can be made before. It lasts well, so one can store it and use when needed. Just warm broth, add the saved roux andthe sauce comes together.

The French term roux truly points to a rust color, which hints at the brown tones that flour takes when cooked with butter.

Roux Ratio Calculator: Perfect Flour to Fat Every Time

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