Convert Silverbeet from Whole Silverbeet bunches to US cups (chopped)
Convert whole silverbeet bunches to US cups below. One medium bunch is about 10 US cups, and 2 silverbeet bunches make roughly 20 US cups.
Bunch sizes vary between supermarkets and greengrocers, and the thick stems add bulk without contributing much to the cup measurement. Strip the stems before measuring if your recipe calls for leaves only.
How many US cups is a bunch?
One medium bunch gives about 10 US cups of silverbeet when chopped, so 2 silverbeet bunches come to roughly 20 US cups. A small bunch is about 5.71 US cups and a large one about 14.29 US cups, so set the size selector to match what you have.
Related Silverbeet Ingredients
Using spinach instead? The spinach converter handles whole-bunch weights and chopped cups across small, medium, and large sizes. See what one medium bunch is in US cups.
Cooking kale instead? The kale converter works out whole-bunch weights and chopped cups across small, medium, and large sizes. See what one medium bunch is in US cups.
Out of silverbeet? See silverbeet substitutes →
Silverbeet converter tool
Enter an amount, pick your units, and set the size for counting whole silverbeet bunches.
Result
10 cups (US)Silverbeet Calculators & Kitchen Tools
Working with silverbeet? These tools handle the jobs a converter cannot.
- Recipe Scaler Scale any recipe up or down and keep every ingredient in ratio.
Common Silverbeet conversions
Quick reference for silverbeet at medium size. Switch the size in the converter above for small or large.
| silverbeet bunches | US cups (chopped) |
|---|---|
| 1 bunch | 10 cups (US) |
| 2 silverbeet bunches | 20 cups (US) |
| 3 silverbeet bunches | 30 cups (US) |
| 4 silverbeet bunches | 40 cups (US) |
| 5 silverbeet bunches | 50 cups (US) |
| 6 silverbeet bunches | 60 cups (US) |
For the reverse conversion, see how many silverbeet bunches are in a US cup.
Silverbeet conversion chart
The chart below shows how whole silverbeet bunches (medium size) convert to cups, grams and ounces.
| silverbeet bunches | cups (US) | cups | g | oz | lb | kg |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 bunch | 10 cups (US) | 9.72 cups | 350 g | 12.35 oz | 0.77 lb | 0.35 kg |
| 2 silverbeet bunches | 20 cups (US) | 19.44 cups | 700 g | 24.69 oz | 1.54 lb | 0.7 kg |
| 3 silverbeet bunches | 30 cups (US) | 29.17 cups | 1050 g | 37.04 oz | 2.31 lb | 1.05 kg |
| 4 silverbeet bunches | 40 cups (US) | 38.89 cups | 1400 g | 49.38 oz | 3.09 lb | 1.4 kg |
| 5 silverbeet bunches | 50 cups (US) | 48.61 cups | 1750 g | 61.73 oz | 3.86 lb | 1.75 kg |
Silverbeet varieties and best uses
The conversions above are the same whatever variety you use; the difference is what each is good for. Here is how the common silverbeet varieties compare.
| Variety | Best for |
|---|---|
| Green (Swiss Chard) | All-purpose use in soups, sautés, and frittatas: classic white stems with large dark leaves. |
| Rainbow Chard | Salads, sides, and garnishes: same flavour as green but with colourful red, yellow, and orange stems. |
| Ruby (Red Chard) | Salads, pickling, and colour in cooked dishes: deep red stems that bleed colour when cooked. |
Which should I pick?
Green silverbeet (Swiss chard) is the supermarket default and the best all-purpose choice for soups, sautés, and frittatas. Rainbow or ruby chard carries the same flavour with colourful stems, so use it where the look matters, in salads and sides. Strip the thick stems before measuring if your recipe counts leaves only, since they add bulk without cup volume.
Frequently Asked Questions
- How many cups is one medium bunch?
- One medium bunch (about 350 g) gives roughly 9.72 cups of chopped flesh. A small one (around 200 g) yields about 5.56 cups and a large one (around 500 g) about 13.89 cups, so set the size selector to match the silverbeet bunches you actually have before you trust the figure. Open silverbeet converter
- How much does a medium bunch weigh?
- A medium bunch weighs about 350 g, with a small one around 200 g and a large one near 500 g. That range changes the weight of any recipe that counts silverbeet bunches by the piece, so set the size selector to match what you actually have before trusting a cup or gram figure.
- How much does an average bunch weigh?
- An average bunch is the same as a medium one: about 350 g. A small bunch is lighter at around 200 g and a large one heavier at about 500 g, so the size you actually have changes the total for any recipe that counts silverbeet bunches by the piece rather than by weight.
- Which silverbeet variety should I use?
- Green silverbeet (Swiss chard) is the supermarket default and the best all-purpose choice for soups, sautés, and frittatas. Rainbow or ruby chard carries the same flavour with colourful stems, so use it where the look matters, in salads and sides. Strip the thick stems before measuring if your recipe counts leaves only, since they add bulk without cup volume.
- How much does a large bunch weigh?
- A large bunch weighs about 500 g, noticeably more than a medium, or average, one at 350 g or a small one at 200 g. Set the size selector to large to convert cups, grams and ounces for the bigger silverbeet bunches you actually have on the counter.
Other produce
Convert another fruit or vegetable:
- Apple
- Pear
- Lemon
- Lime
- Orange
- Grapefruit
- Banana
- Strawberry
- Blueberry
- Grapes
- Plum
- Apricot
- Fig
- Pomegranate
- Pineapple
- Mango
- Kiwi
- Watermelon
- Tomato
- Cucumber
- Avocado
- Potato
- Sweet Potato
- Corn
- Carrot
- Beetroot
- Ginger
- Turmeric
- Pumpkin
- Butternut Squash
- Zucchini
- Mushroom
- Portobello Mushroom
- Bell Pepper
- Onion
- Shallot
- Spring Onion
- Celery
- Fennel
- Garlic
- Broccoli
- Cauliflower
- Cabbage
- Spinach
- Kale
- All ingredient measurements