20 Incredible Important Tomato Conversions for Home Cooking (2024)

by G. Stephen Jones 41 Comments

20 Incredible Important Tomato Conversions for Home Cooking (1)

Tomato Conversions

Tomato Conversions & Equivalents

I have trouble remembering how to convert some ingredients. For example, howmany cups of dry beans convert to how many ounces of cooked beans is always hard for me to remember. The same is true with tomatoes.

I needed to know how many ounces of fresh tomatoes are there in a 32-ounce of canned tomato. You'll want to know these conversions because some recipes give you the tomatoes fresh, some canned, and some as tomato paste.

You may be unable to get your hands on some fresh tomatoes out of season, so you resort to canned. It doesn't matter; here are tomato conversions that may be useful when cooking.

Of course, all this varies depending on the type of tomato you are referring to, but this will give you a good ballpark figure.

Tomato Conversions

1 small tomato= 3 - 4 ounces
1 medium tomato= 5 - 6 ounces
1 large tomato= 7 ounces
1 cherry tomato=½ - 2 ounces
3 medium-round tomatoes= 1 pound
8 plum tomatoes= 1 pound
15 - 20 cherry tomatoes= 1 pound
25 to 30 cherry tomatoesyield 2 cups chopped
1 pound fresh tomatoesyield 1½ cups chopped
1 pound of fresh tomatoesyield 3 cups pureed
2½ pounds fresh tomatoesyields 3 cups chopped, drained
2½ pounds fresh tomatoesyields 2½ cups seeded, chopped, cooked
2 cups chopped tomatoes= 1 pound
1 (14½ ounce) can tomatoes= 5 to 6 whole or about 1 pound
1 (16-ounce) can tomatoes= 2 cups
1 (28-ounce) can tomatoes= 3 cups
1 (28-ounce) can tomatoes= 10 to 12 whole or about 2 pounds
1 (35-ounce) can tomatoes= 4 cups
1 bushel of tomatoes=53 - 56 pounds
1 bushel of tomatoes=30 quarts

20 Incredible Important Tomato Conversions for Home Cooking (3)

Tomato Paste Conversions

⅜ cup tomato paste + ½ cup water= 1 cup tomato sauce
1 (6 ounce) can tomato pasteyields¾ cup

Other Important Ingredient Conversions

BEAN CONVERSIONSINGREDIENT SUBSTITUTIONS
HERB CONVERSIONSMUSHROOM CONVERSIONS
GRAIN CONVERSIONSPASTA/RICE CONVERSIONS
INGREDIENT CONVERSIONSTOMATO CONVERSIONS

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Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Cher schlotterer

    I am wondering, if I dehydrate 8 medium tomatoes, how much tomato powder should I expect?

    Reply

    • TerriB

      I don't have any tomatoes (canned or fresh for a recipe that calls for 2 28oz cans of tomatoes. How much tomato sauce can I substitute for the canned tomatoes?

      Reply

  2. Donna

    One bushel gave me one pint.

    Reply

  3. Diane

    I use one 6 oz Tomato Paste to 1 cup water for 14 oz of Tomato Sauce.

    Reply

  4. Cassie

    I grow my own tomatoes and roast them off when I have enough ripe ones. My question is what is the ratio of roasted tomatoes to fresh chopped tomatoes?

    Reply

    • G. Stephen Jones

      Hi Cassie, great question and one I had to research a little. I found a recipe from Mark Bittman for roasted tomatoes that calls for 24 fresh plum tomatoes that yields 2 cups of roasted tomatoes. Since there are about 8 plum tomatoes per pound, that means 24 plum tomatoes equals around 3 pounds of fresh plum tomatoes. So I'm going to say 3 pounds of fresh plum tomatoes chopped should yield about 2 cups roasted. If anyone has a better conversion, please share.

      Reply

  5. Rose M Alexander

    1 (28 ounces) can tomatoes = 10 to 12 whole or about 2 pounds

    Please explain how 10 to 12 fresh tomatoes is equal to 2 lbs. Most often one tomato is equal to one pound. By your metric, if I substitute fresh for canned 30 lbs of fresh tomatoes is equal to 15 (28 ounces) of canned tomatoes.

    Reply

  6. Kanira

    I was wondering how many tomatoes are used in one container of store bought tomato sauce. This is because I need to know how high the vegetable : junk ratio is... I want to know how much sauce I need to have an accurate supplement for real vegetables.

    Reply

  7. Cheryl

    How many cups of tomatoe juice will an 11qt basket of tomatoes yield?

    Reply

    • G. Stephen Jones

      Hi Cheryl, check out http://www.pickyourown.org/info.htm. From my research on the net, I learned "3 pounds tomatoes yield one quart of juice". So the question is how many pounds of tomatoes in an 11 quart basket?

      Reply

  8. Cheryl

    I have an old recipe of my grandmothers I’m trying to convert? Lol

    Reply

  9. Jessica

    How much pasta sauce is equivalent to 5-6 roma tomatoes?

    Reply

  10. Virginia

    How many tomatoes do I need to make a gallon of them.

    Reply

  11. brian boomer

    Hello, I am growing super sweet tomatoes in the fall and will make salsa. Does 1 pint equal one pound? Approximate. thank you.

    Reply

    • G. Stephen Jones

      A pint of water weighs about a pound but you are asking about tomatoes. Hmmm. It really depends on the size of the tomatoes and how many can fit into a pint container. And how are they processed? Whole, sliced, chopped, etc. Also, you realize pints are volume measurement and not weight measurement so it is a little confusing. I found a site that discovered 1 pound is equal to 25 to 30 cherry tomatoes, 8 plum tomatoes or 3 medium round tomatoes. I'm going to guess there are about 18 to 20 cherry tomatoes in a pint so that means no, 1 pint does not equal 1 pound.

      Reply

  12. Theresa Vince

    I have a recipe using 1 gallon of tomatoes. Approximately how many medium tomatoes is that?

    Reply

    • G. Stephen Jones

      Hi Theresa, the problem with converting a gallon of tomatoes to whole medium tomatoes is you are trying to convert liquid measurement to weight measurement. If you could tell me the weight of that gallon tomatoes, we could easily convert.

      Reply

  13. Carlene M Gentry-Carriveau

    How many pounds of tomatoes in 2/3 bushel?

    Reply

    • G. Stephen Jones

      Hi Carlene, 1 bushel of tomatoes equals 56 pounds so 2/3 of a bushel would be about 37 pounds.

      Reply

  14. Marilyn

    Can I use tomato paste to make tomato juice to use in a recipe?

    Reply

    • G. Stephen Jones

      Hi Marilyn, I have never made tomato juice from tomato paste but I did a little research and it appears you can. For every can of tomato paste, add four cans of water. If you give it a try, please let me know your results.

      Reply

  15. Anne

    I would like to know how many pounds of tomatoes does an 11 quart basket hold?

    Reply

    • G. Stephen Jones

      Hi Anne, a bushel of tomatoes weighs about 56 pounds. There are about 30 quarts per bushel so that means 30 quarts weighs about 56 pounds. That means one quart weighs about 1.87 pounds so 11 quarts should equal around 20 pounds if I'm doing my math correctly.

      Reply

  16. Janie

    I have a recipe for salsa that call for 30 tomatoes . I have an assortment of San marzano and plum. I’m tripling the recipe so want this to be consistent. How many pounds do you think 30 tomatoes would equal? Right now I’m figuring 2 plums =one Med size tomato and most San marzano = one

    Reply

  17. Katherine

    I have a recipe that calls for 5 quarts of tomatoes - approximately how many tomatoes (field)?

    Reply

    • G. Stephen Jones

      Hi Katherine, let's see if I can get my math correct here. 1 medium tomato = about 6 ounces. There are 32 ounces in a quart so 5 quarts would be 160 ounces. If you divide 160 ounces by 6 ounces, you get 26.666 tomatoes. You can weigh a few of your field tomatoes to come up with a closer average if you like. Hope this helps.

      Reply

  18. Rede Batcheller

    An error = ha ha! It's PLUM tomatoes. I suspect Charles E. Mispel 'gotcha'. Anyway, there is no such thing as far as I know as plumb tomatoes.

    Reply

    • G. Stephen Jones

      Thanks for letting me know and now fixed.

      “It is a damn poor mind that can think of only one way to spell a word.”
      ― Andrew Jackson

      Reply

  19. Pamela

    I’m making spaghetti sauce without meat and all my recipes call for 30 lbs. of tomatoes. I want to use canned crushed tomatoes. How many cans (15 oz.) would equal 30 lbs. tomatoes??

    Reply

  20. Wade B Lawrence

    You indicate 1 lb. Of tomatoes yields 3 cups of puree. Since a cup of water weighs 8 oz. and tomato puree is heavier than water, three cups of puree weighs at least 24 oz., or 8 oz. more than the weight of tomatoes you started with. I haven't measured, but a pound of tomatoes yields more like 2 cups of puree, at most.

    Reply

  21. Kevin

    Thanks for the conversions, I'm sure it helped a lot of people. I used the chart to freeze fresh Tom's out of my garden. Just for an approx when I follow recipes. I actually weighed out my Tom's because of the different sizes and varieties. But the chart conversions were right on.

    Reply

  22. David Mack

    I'm trying to convert tomato juice into tomato sauce. Is there any way you could suggest a ratio. It's for chili. I've had a couple cans of juice that I don't drink. And would like to make chili with them.

    Reply

    • G. Stephen Jones

      David, I didn't know the answer to this, so I searched and found this: "Tomato juice can be used in most recipes calling for tomato sauce. However, since it is very thin, simmer the juice over heat to thicken it up. You can also do this by making a roux, mixing in fat and flour to get it to the consistency you desire." Hope this helps.

      Reply

  23. Jackie

    This may seem silly, but here goes! My recipe for canning a pasta sauce calls for 8c of tomato puree. It does not specify fresh or canned, although it does give directions for fresh.(stating to cook down til you have the consistancy you like. My question : Could I substitute canned puree at a 1:1 ratio, or would canned be too thick?

    Reply

    • G. Stephen Jones

      Jackie, that's not a silly question at all. I don't know if there is a difference, but I would have no problem substituting canned or tubed tomato paste for fresh, homemade tomato paste.

      Reply

  24. Carolyn

    Hello! What valuable information you provide. My questions are these...I am making salsa to be put into pint jars. My girlfriend does hers by buying a bushel of tomatoes. She is measuring the peppers, onions and jalapenos by the gallon bag of each. My tomatoes won't all ripen at the same time, so I need to figure out how many tomatoes I will need. I can divide my gallon of veggies into cups, but don't have any idea how to do this! I keep getting SO confused, lol can you help me?!?!

    Reply

    • G. Stephen Jones

      Carolyn, we need a math major to answer your question. I'm sorry, but I really don't have a good answer for you.

      Reply

  25. Aaron Cady

    A gallon bag holds 16 cups of crushed tomatoes. When they're whole the airspace cannot be directly accounted for. To do so you would have to take a representatve sample of the whole tomatoes, crush them, measure out a cup, weigh it (weight 1), weigh the gallon of whole tomatoes (weight 2). Divide weight 2 by weight 1, multiply the result by 16, and that's how many cups of crushed or diced tomatoes you'll get from the gallon bag of fresh ones. Two tablespoons of paste is equivalent to a cup of crushed, so a gallon of crushed tomatoes could be used to make a pint of paste.

    Reply

    • G. Stephen Jones

      Hi Aaron, thanks for these conversions. When I first looked at it, I thought, how can a gallon ziplock bag hold 16 cups of crushed tomatoes, but there are 2 cups in a pint, 2 pints in a quart, and 4 quarts in a gallon, which means 16 cups in a gallon but that is for a liquid. Wouldn't crushed tomatoes have more volume because they are not liquid?

      Reply

      • Aaron Cady

        It depends on how crushed one means by crushed. Mine are barely distinghishable from sauce, so it works. If they were really big chunks I'd go by weight, not volume.

        Reply

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20 Incredible Important Tomato Conversions for Home Cooking (2024)

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