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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Aug 2005
    Location
    Perth, Western Australia
    Posts
    5,316

    quart

    The Quinoa recipe I just cooked made me chuckle & wonder...I thought it was funny, odd & strange...

    Why is it that an American recipe would state you require a quart of liquid & then a cup of a non liquid item? Would it not make sense to use one measurement(ie: a cup) for both liquid & non liquid materials??



    Interesting....

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Sep 2007
    Location
    Uncanny Valley
    Posts
    14,498
    Quote Originally Posted by crazycanuck View Post
    The Quinoa recipe I just cooked made me chuckle & wonder...I thought it was funny, odd & strange...

    Why is it that an American recipe would state you require a quart of liquid & then a cup of a non liquid item? Would it not make sense to use one measurement(ie: a cup) for both liquid & non liquid materials??



    Interesting....
    Those aren't different systems, just different increments in the same system of volume measurement - a quart is four cups, a pint is two cups, a gallon is four quarts, a tablespoon is three teaspoons, four tablespoons is 1/4 cup.

    Where it DOES get confusing is in "ounces," which is both a unit of weight (1/16 pound) and of volume (1/8 cup or two tablespoons). So you have to specify "fluid ounces" or "ounces avoirdupois."
    Speed comes from what you put behind you. - Judi Ketteler

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Jan 2006
    Location
    Massachusetts
    Posts
    2,556
    The one I can't understand is that several years ago the scientific journals I publish in insisted that we no long use millibars as a unit of atmospheric pressure, but hectopascals (ie. 100 pascals), which are exactly the same thing. Now you find people who read "850 hPa" as "850 millibars", as if millibars just has a new abbreviation. Very odd that hecto-anything is considered a standard unit.

    I can generally deal with both English and metric units, but I absolutely cannot abide the Rankin scale.
    Oil is good, grease is better.

    2007 Peter Mooney w/S&S couplers/Terry Butterfly
    1993 Bridgestone MB-3/Avocet O2 Air 40W
    1980 Columbus Frame with 1970 Campy parts
    1954 Raleigh 3-speed/Brooks B72

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Aug 2008
    Location
    under the Tucson sun
    Posts
    485
    Quote Originally Posted by DebW View Post
    The one I can't understand is that several years ago the scientific journals I publish in insisted that we no long use millibars as a unit of atmospheric pressure, but hectopascals (ie. 100 pascals), which are exactly the same thing. Now you find people who read "850 hPa" as "850 millibars", as if millibars just has a new abbreviation. Very odd that hecto-anything is considered a standard unit.
    I'm a graduate student in audiology, and we express middle ear pressure in daPa (decaPascals). Go figure.

    I've lived in the US my entire life, but I try to think in meters because I seem to make more mistakes when I'm having to deal with things like eighths of an inch than when everything is just base 10--metric is so much easier! I do tend to think inches when sewing, though, since all of my good rulers and cutting mats only have inches marked. The interstate I take to my parents' house is marked in kilometers because it only exists between Tucson and the border with Mexico, and I still have no concept of how long a km is... I just know it goes by faster than a mile does.

 

 

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