US legal cup to Hectoliter

cup

1 cup

hl

0.0024 hl

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Quick Reference Table (US legal cup to Hectoliter)

US legal cup (cup)Hectoliter (hl)
0.250.0006
0.330.000792
0.50.0012
10.0024
20.0048
40.0096

About US legal cup (cup)

The US legal cup is a unit of volume defined as exactly 240 milliliters, used on US nutrition labels by FDA regulation. It differs slightly from the US customary cup (236.588 mL = 8 US fluid ounces). In everyday cooking, the 4 mL difference is negligible, and the two are used interchangeably. Australia uses a 250 mL metric cup, which is noticeably larger. The cup is the most common volume unit in US cooking recipes.

A standard measuring cup in a US kitchen set holds 240 mL. Cereal serving sizes on nutrition labels are typically 1 cup (240 mL).

About Hectoliter (hl)

A hectoliter (hL) is 100 liters, the standard unit of volume in the brewing, winemaking, and petroleum industries. Beer production is measured in hectoliters worldwide: a microbrewery might produce 500 hL per year, while a major brewery produces millions. Wine harvests and grape yields are reported in hL per hectare. Fuel depot capacities and tanker truck volumes are commonly expressed in hectoliters across Europe. One hectoliter of water has a mass of 100 kg.

A standard 50-liter beer keg = 0.5 hL. A microbrewery defines its annual output in hundreds of hL.


US legal cup – Frequently Asked Questions

The US legal cup (nutrition labels) is exactly 240 mL. The US customary cup (8 US fl oz) is approximately 236.6 mL. In cooking, both are treated as 240 mL; the difference is negligible for most recipes.

The US legal cup is 240 mL; the Australian metric cup is 250 mL — about 4% larger. Australian recipes calling for 4 cups use 1,000 mL vs 960 mL with US cups, which can matter in baking.

Approximately 4.167 US legal cups fit in one liter (1,000 mL ÷ 240 mL). Practically, 4 cups ≈ 960 mL ≈ 1 liter — often used interchangeably in cooking.

Most US drip coffee makers define a "cup" as 5 or 6 fl oz (148–177 mL) — smaller than the standard 8 fl oz measuring cup. A "12-cup" coffee maker typically makes 60–72 fl oz, or only about 7–9 standard 8-oz cups.

Baking is chemistry — flour, fat, liquid, and leavening interact in precise ratios. Too much flour (even 10–15% extra from packing a cup too tightly) produces dense, dry results. Too much liquid makes cake batter collapse. Cooking is more forgiving because sautéing, braising, and roasting rely on technique and taste adjustment, not exact chemical reactions. This is why professional bakers weigh ingredients in grams rather than using volume cups — a cup of flour can vary from 120 to 160 g depending on how it is scooped.

Hectoliter – Frequently Asked Questions

A hectoliter (hL) equals 100 liters. It is the standard unit of volume in beer and wine production, and is widely used in petroleum and agricultural chemical industries across Europe.

Breweries adopted the hectoliter as a convenient production unit — large enough to avoid unwieldy numbers at industrial scale. A craft brewery producing 1,000 hL per year makes roughly 200,000 500-mL bottles.

A US half-barrel keg holds 58.7 liters ≈ 0.587 hL. A European 50-liter keg = 0.5 hL. A US quarter-barrel keg = 0.293 hL.

Vineyard yields are reported in hectoliters per hectare (hL/ha). A typical quality wine yield is 30–50 hL/ha. National wine production statistics are expressed in millions of hectoliters.

One cubic meter equals exactly 10 hectoliters (1 m³ = 1,000 L = 10 hL).

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