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Memory Tricks: Remembering How Many Cups in a Gallon

2008_06_10-QuartsinGallons.jpgNow that the sting has worn off a bit, we can divulge the full story of how we bought the wrong amount of strawberries for our review of the Gluten-Free Strawberry Rhubarb Crumble.

It was all because--on the spot, in the store, without Google Calculator to save us--we couldn't remember how many cups were in a quart!

Telling this story to a friend later, she laughed and said, "Don't you know about the gallon-eating-the-quarts trick?"

At our blank look, she grabbed a pen and drew a diagram like the one above...

 
 

So there's:

2 Cups in a Pint
2 Pints in a Quart
4 Quarts in a Gallon

And so two "C's" fit inside a "P," two "P's" fit inside a "Q," and four "Q's" fit inside a big, enormous "G."

It's like "the woman who swallowed a fly" for cups and quarts!

It still takes a few minutes of mental visualization, but with this diagram in mind, you can easily figure out that there are four cups in a quart, 16 cups in a gallon, and so on.

Fingers crossed--with luck we'll never find ourselves in this particular grocery store conundrum again!

Any other good memory tricks you use when cooking?

Related: Measuring: Dip and Sweep

(Image by Emma Christensen for the Kitchn)

Comments (12)

This is great - a print-out is going on my fridge.

posted by amt230 on 2008-06-10 09:10:51
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And a pint is pound world renown!

so, 16 oz. or one pint = 1 lb.

and a half pint or 8 oz. = 1/2 lb.

posted by art on 2008-06-10 09:21:00
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Oh that is awesome...and a font-lover's dream!

posted by Michelle of Montreal on 2008-06-10 09:32:50
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wait, that's kinda brilliant! turn that badboy into a graphic for dishtowels and ovenmitts and you'll be a gazillionaire. :)

posted by kdkaboom on 2008-06-10 09:53:28
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How about putting that graphic onto reusable shopping bags? Then it would be with us when we need it :)

posted by 22209 on 2008-06-10 10:17:10
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Art -- that's really only for water. You could get yourself in trouble if you use that mnemonic (I always heard Alton Brown saying, "A pint's a pound the world around") for corn syrup, for example.

posted by ArlingtonEric on 2008-06-10 10:20:30
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When making rice
Water's twice
(Makes thrice)

posted by Married ...with Dinner on 2008-06-10 11:27:32
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i learned that diagram in elementary school and have never forgotten it! hooray for childhood cooking memories (or at least memory aids)!

posted by katiebug on 2008-06-10 12:39:12
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A quart means a quarter of a gallon. Or was that so obvious that it's not worth pointing out? Also, 4 cups in a quart, easy to remember since quart means four. (On a smaller scale, same theme, four ounces in a quarter cup.)

I use the pint/pound thing often. Most (wet) food is mostly water or oil anyway so it's close enough for me.

posted by erica on 2008-06-10 22:25:05
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Erica-

All my years in school and it never occurred to me that a quart referred to quarter of a gallon....duh

posted by zero on 2008-06-11 12:01:57
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Erica-

Wouldn't it be four ounces in a half cup?

posted by zhasmene on 2008-06-22 17:17:36
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It's more simple to remember numbers than this kind of phrases. Why do you think it's so hard to remember a number ?

______________
az physical therapist

posted by EddieSmith on 2008-11-03 11:22:06
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