Tablespoon
A tablespoon (tbsp.) is a large spoon. In many English-speaking regions, the term now refers to a large spoon used for serving;[1] however, in some regions, it is the largest type of spoon used for eating.
By extension, the term is also used as a cooking measure of volume. In this capacity, it is most commonly abbreviated tbsp. or T., and occasionally referred to as a tablespoonful to distinguish it from the utensil. The unit of measurement varies by region: a United States tablespoon is approximately 14.8 ml (0.50 US fl oz), a United Kingdom and Canadian tablespoon is exactly 15 ml (0.51 US fl oz),[2] and an Australian tablespoon is 20 ml (0.68 US fl oz).[3] The capacity of the utensil (as opposed to the measurement) is defined by neither law nor custom, but only by preferences. And it may or may not significantly approximate the measurement.
Dining
Before about 1700, it was customary for Europeans to bring their own spoons to the table. Spoons were carried as personal property in much the same way as people today carry wallets, key rings, etc. From about 1700 the place setting became popular, and with it the "table-spoon" (hyphenated), "table-fork" and "table-knife". Around the same time the tea-spoon and dessert-spoon first appeared, and the table-spoon was reserved for eating soup.[4] The 18th century witnessed a proliferation of different sorts of spoons, including the mustard-spoon, salt-spoon, coffee-spoon, and soup-spoon.
In the late 19th century UK, the dessert-spoon and soup-spoon began to displace the table-spoon as the primary implement for eating from a bowl, at which point the name "table-spoon" took on a secondary meaning as a much larger serving spoon.[5] At the time the first edition of the Oxford English Dictionary was published in 1928, "tablespoon" (which by then was no longer hyphenated) still had two definitions in the UK: the original definition (eating spoon) and the new definition (serving spoon).
Victorian and Edwardian era tablespoons used in the UK are often 25 ml (0.85 US fl oz) or sometimes larger. They are used only for preparing and serving food, not as part of a place-setting. Common tablespoons intended for use as cutlery (called dessert spoons in the UK, where a tablespoon is always a serving spoon) usually hold 7–14 ml (0.24–0.47 US fl oz),[6] considerably less than some tablespoons used for serving.
Culinary measure
Naming
In recipes, an abbreviation like tbsp. is usually used to refer to a tablespoon, to differentiate it from the smaller teaspoon (tsp.). Some authors additionally capitalize the abbreviation, as Tbsp., while leaving tsp. in lower case, to emphasize that the larger tablespoon, rather than the smaller teaspoon, is wanted. The tablespoon abbreviation is sometimes further abbreviated to Tb. or T.
Relationship to teaspoon and fluid ounce
In most places, except Australia, one tablespoon equals three teaspoons—and one US tablespoon is 14.8 ml (0.50 US fl oz) or 15 ml (0.51 US fl oz).
Traditional definitions
The traditional US interpretation of the tablespoon as a unit of volume is:[7]
1 US tablespoon = 4 fluid drams = 3 teaspoons = 1⁄2 US fluid ounce ≈ 14.8 ml[8]
In nutrition labeling in the US and the UK, a tablespoon is defined as 15 ml (0.51 US fl oz).[9]
A metric tablespoon is exactly equal to 15 ml (0.51 US fl oz).[10]
The Australian definition of the tablespoon as a unit of volume is:
1 Australian tablespoon = 20 ml ≈ 2⁄3 fl oz = 2 dessertspoons = 4 teaspoons
Dry measure
For dry ingredients, if a recipe calls for a level tablespoon, the usual meaning without further qualification, is measured by filling the spoon and scraping it level. In contrast, a heaped, heaping, or rounded spoonful is not leveled off, and includes a heap above the spoon. The exact volume of a heaped tablespoon depends somewhat on the shape and curvature of the measuring spoon being used and largely upon the physical properties of the substance being measured, and so is not a precise unit of measurement. If neither a rounded nor a level tablespoon is specified, a level tablespoon is used, just as a cup of flour is a level cup unless otherwise specified.
Apothecary measure
In the 18th century, the table-spoon became an unofficial unit of the apothecaries' system of measures, equal to 4 drams (1⁄2 fl oz, 14.8 ml). It was more commonly known by the Latin cochleare majus (abbreviated cochl. maj.) or, in apothecaries' notation, f℥ss or f℥ß.[11][12][13]
See also
Look up tablespoon in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. |
- Dessert spoon
- Teaspoon
References
- ↑ The Oxford English Dictionary Third edition, December 2008, entry at tablespoon(subscription required)
- ↑ "How Many Tablespoons in a Cup - Easy Conversions". First Health Mag. Retrieved 2016-05-29.
- ↑ Chuck Smothermon (2002). Better Homes and Gardens Biggest Book of Slow Cooker Recipes. Meredith Books. p. 416. ISBN 9780696215469. Retrieved 9 January 2015.
- ↑ Moore, Simon (1987). Spoons 1650–1930. Shire Publications. p. 12.
- ↑ Simon Moore (2005). Spoons 1650-2000. Osprey Publishing. p. 44. ISBN 978-0-7478-0640-0. Retrieved 12 December 2011.
- ↑ Dean BS, Krenzelok EP (April 1986). "Syrup of ipecac dosing ... How much is a tablespoonful?". Vet Hum Toxicol. 28 (2): 155–6. PMID 2871653.
- ↑ A. Thompson; B. N. Taylor. The NIST Guide for the use of International System of Units (PDF). United States Government.
- ↑ Mechtly, E. A: The International System of units, NASA-SP=7012, 1964, 1973. The reference indicates the exact conversion to cubic metres, which has been converted to 14.78676478125 ml here for convenience.
- ↑ 21 CFR (Code of Federal Regulations) 101.9(b)(5)(viii)
- ↑ Cardarelli, François (2003). Encyclopaedia of Scientific Units, Weights and Measures. London: Springer. pp. 44. ISBN 978-1-4471-1122-1.
- ↑ Alexander Whitelaw, ed. (1884). The popular encyclopedia; or, 'Conversations Lexicon'. p. 11. Retrieved 12 December 2011.
- ↑ Thomas Jefferson Ritter; Elizabeth Johnstone (1910). Mother's remedies; over one thousand tried and tested remedies from mothers of the United States and Canada. G. H. Foote pub. co. p. 637. Retrieved 12 December 2011.
- ↑ Hazell's annual. Hazell, Watson and Viney. 1910. p. 584. Retrieved 12 December 2011.