Food Processing Measurement Tools
Food Processing Measurement Tools
To measure ingredients by weight, start by placing your mixing bowl or tray on top of your scale
and hitting the "tare" or "zero" button. This will account for the weight of the bowl and set your
scale's counter back to zero.
1. Mass/Weight Units
Gram (g): The most commonly used unit for small quantities.
Kilogram (kg): Standard unit for larger quantities, especially for bulk ingredients.
Milligram (mg): Used for very precise measurements, like additives or spices.
Ton (metric ton): Used for industrial-scale food production.
2. Volume Units
3. Temperature Units
Activity 2: Make a list showing the 5 dry ingredients, 5 liquid ingredients and their appropriate measurements.
The Tale of Millie the Metric Spoon and Ollie the Imperial Cup
In a quiet kitchen drawer, two old friends sat side by side: Millie the Metric Spoon and Ollie the Imperial Cup. Though they
had worked in the same kitchen for years, they rarely saw eye to eye.
Millie, polished and precise, always knew exactly how much she held. “I’m 5 milliliters!” she’d say proudly, measuring small
amounts with perfect accuracy. She liked things neat and tidy—multiplying or dividing by 10 was her specialty. For Millie,
everything just fit into place.
Ollie, on the other hand, was sturdy and a bit old-fashioned. He measured by ounces, cups, and pints, always relying on intuition
and a feel for the kitchen’s rhythm. “A dash here, a smidge there,” Ollie would say. “Cooking is an art, not a science!” He took
pride in tradition and didn’t care much for exact conversions.
One day, the chef decided to bake a cake that required both systems—grams of flour, ounces of butter, milliliters of milk, and
cups of sugar. Chaos broke loose as Millie and Ollie tried to work together.
“And how do I know what 50 milliliters looks like in ounces?” Ollie grumbled.
But then the chef pulled out a special chart—a conversion guide. Suddenly, everything made sense! 200 grams of flour was about
1.6 cups, and 50 milliliters was 1.7 ounces.
For the first time, Millie and Ollie worked side by side, converting and measuring together. The cake came out perfect. Not too
sweet, not too dense—just right. As they rested back in the drawer, they realized something important.
“Agreed,” Ollie replied. “Maybe it’s not the units that matter, but how we use them.”
Comprehension Questions
1. Who are the main characters in the story?
2. What is Millie’s specialty in measuring?
3. What units does Ollie the Imperial Cup typically use?
4. What problem did Millie and Ollie face when working together?
5. How did they solve the problem?
6. What did they realize at the end of the story?
Summative Test #1
I. Write the abbreviation of the following measurement units and categorized each unit. (V for volume, W for weights or T
for temperature). (30 points)
1.
2. Tablespoon 7. Gram
3. Teaspoon 8. Pint
4. Gallon 9. Pound
5. Ounces 10. Milliliter
6. Kilogram 11. Quart