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Teaspoon

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A teaspoon (tsp.) is a small spoon that can be used to stir a cup of tea or coffee, or as a tool for measuring volume.[1][2] The size of teaspoons ranges from about 2.5 to 7.3 mL (0.088 to 0.257 imp fl oz; 0.085 to 0.247 US fl oz). For cooking purposes and dosing of medicine, a teaspoonful is defined as 5 mL (0.18 imp fl oz; 0.17 US fl oz), and standard measuring spoons are used.[3]

Cutlery

A cup of coffee with coffee spoon

A teaspoon is a small spoon suitable for stirring and sipping the contents of a cup of tea or coffee, or adding a portion of loose sugar to it. These spoons have heads more or less oval in shape. Teaspoons are a common part of a place setting.

Teaspoons with longer handles, such as iced tea spoons, are commonly used also for ice cream desserts or floats. Similar spoons include the tablespoon and the dessert spoon, the latter intermediate in size between a teaspoon and a tablespoon, used in eating dessert and sometimes soup or cereals. Much less common is the coffee spoon, which is a smaller version of the teaspoon, intended for use with the small type of coffee cup.[4] Another teaspoon, called an orange spoon (in American English: grapefruit spoon), tapers to a sharp point or teeth, and is used to separate citrus fruits from their membranes. A bar spoon, equivalent to a teaspoon, is used in measuring ingredients for mixed drinks.

A container designed to hold extra teaspoons, called a spooner, usually in a set with a covered sugar container, formed a part of Victorian table service.

History

An 1825 cartoon makes fun of a Frenchman unfamiliar with the British etiquette. The guest did not place his spoon into the cup and is thus being offered his thirteenth cup of tea.[5]

The teaspoon is a European invention.[6] Small spoons were common in Europe since at least the 13th century. These special spoons were introduced almost simultaneously with tea and coffee[6] (Pettigrew points to use in the mid-17th century[7]). Originally teaspoons were exotic items, precious and small, resembling the demitasse spoons of the later times.[6] Also used for coffee, these spoons were usually made of gilt silver, and were available with a variety of handle shapes: plain, twisted, decorated with knobs,[7] also known as knops, hence the knop-top name for such spoons.[8] Widespread use and modern size date back to the Georgian era.[6] The teaspoon is first mentioned in an advertisement in a 1686 edition of the London Gazette,[9][10] teaspoons, probably of English origin, are present on the 1700 Dutch painting by Nicholas Verkolje, "A Tea Party".[11]

A special dish for resting the teaspoons, a "spoon boat", was a part of the tea set in the 18th century.[12] At that time, the spoons were playing important role in the tea drinking etiquette: a spoon laid "across" the teacup indicated that the guest did not need any more tea, otherwise, the hostess was obligated to offer a fresh cup of tea, and it was considered impolite to refuse the offering.[13][14] Pettigrew reports that sometimes the spoons were numbered to make it easier to match the cups with the guests after a refill.[13]

Unit of measure

teaspoon
Measuring spoons, with the second largest one representing the volume of a teaspoon.
General information
Unit systemImperial units, US customary units
Unit ofVolume
Symboltsp
Conversions (imperial)
1 imp tsp in ...... is equal to ...
   SI units   3·552 mL
   US customary units   0·721 US tsp
Conversions (US)
1 US tsp in ...... is equal to ...
   SI units   4·929 mL
   Imperial units   1·388 imp tsp

In some countries, a teaspoon (occasionally teaspoonful) is a cooking measure of volume, especially widely used in cooking recipes and pharmaceutic medical prescriptions. In English it is abbreviated as tsp. or, less often, as t., ts., or tspn.. The abbreviation is never capitalized because a capital letter is customarily reserved for the larger tablespoon ("Tbsp.", "T.", "Tbls.", or "Tb.").[15]

A small scale study in Greece found that household teaspoons are a poor approximation of the standard tsp measure. The study investigated the accuracy of teaspoons as a measuring tool for liquid medicine. They surveyed 71 teaspoons from 25 houses and found that the volume varied between 2.5 and 7.3 ml (0.088 and 0.257 imp fl oz; 0.085 and 0.247 US fl oz).[16]

Metric teaspoon

The metric teaspoon as a unit of culinary measure is 5 ml (0.18 imp fl oz; 0.17 US fl oz),[17] equal to cm3, 13 UK/Canadian metric tablespoon, or 14 Australian metric tablespoon.[18]

United States customary unit

As a unit of culinary measure, one teaspoon in the United States is 13 tablespoon, exactly 4.92892159375 ml, 1 13 US fluid drams, 16 US fl oz, 148 US cup, 1768 US liquid gallon, or 77256 (0.30078125) cubic inches.

For nutritional labeling and medicine in the US, the teaspoon is defined the same as a metric teaspoon—precisely 5 millilitres (mL).[19]

British imperial unit

Traditionally, in the United Kingdom, as a measurement unit for cooking, 1 teaspoon is equal to 1 imperial fluid drachm,[20] the equivalence of 18 imperial fluid ounce. 1 British teaspoon is the equivalence of 12 British dessert spoon and 14 British tablespoon.

Dry ingredients

For dry granular or powdered ingredients (e.g., salt, flour, spices, and especially beverages involving tea and sugar),[21] a recipe may call for the spoon to be filled in a certain way that changes the volume of the ingredient. As with much of cooking, these measures are by their nature inexact. This can be exacerbated here by failing to use a real teaspoon: a teaspoon's greater area supports considerably more to be heaped above it than a deeper hemispherical measuring spoon, so if using a measuring spoon, one will typically use less than called for by the recipe. The definitions of "spoonful" vary, in particular, in a typical American recipe a "spoon" without clarification stands for a "level" spoon (the one with no ingredient showing above the rim of the spoon bowl), while a British cookbook would mean a "round" or "heaped" spoon, with the ingredient peaking above the rim:[22]

  • A scant teaspoon is one which has been filled to slightly less than level.[23]
  • A level teaspoon, which is the default teaspoon if no adjective is given, refers to an approximately leveled filling of the spoon, producing the same volume as for liquids. The excess of ingredient can be scraped off by a knife.[24]
  • A rounded teaspoon is roughly symmetrical with as much ingredient above the rim as is in the spoon below the rim, giving a measure roughly equivalent to two level teaspoons.[24]
  • A heaping (North American English) or heaped (UK English) teaspoon is a larger inexact measure consisting of the amount obtained by scooping the dry ingredient up as high as possible to balance on a spoon. This quantity can vary considerably, up to 5 amounts of ingredient in the level spoon.[24] Many cookbooks treat heaped and rounded spoons interchangeably.[25][26]

Lincoln used the spoon measure without adjectives to define either a rounded one (for flour and sugar) or a level one (for salt and spices).[27]

Apothecary

As an unofficial but once widely used unit of apothecaries' measure, the teaspoon is equal to 1 fluid dram (or drachm) and thus 14 of a tablespoon or 18 of a fluid ounce.[28][29] The apothecaries' teaspoon was formally known by the Latin cochleare minus (cochl. min.) to distinguish it from the tablespoon or cochleare majus (cochl. maj.).[30][31]

When tea-drinking was first introduced to England circa 1660, tea was rare and expensive, as a consequence of which teacups and teaspoons were smaller than today. This situation persisted until 1784, when the Commutation Act reduced the tax on tea from 119% to 12.5%.[32] As the price of tea declined, the size of teacups and teaspoons increased. By the 1850s, the teaspoon as a unit of culinary measure had increased to 13 of a tablespoon, but the apothecary unit of measure remained the same.[33] Nevertheless, the teaspoon, usually under its Latin name, continued to be used in apothecaries' measures for several more decades, with the original definition of one fluid dram.

See also

References

  1. ^ Marie O'Toole, ed. (6 June 2013). Mosby's Medical Dictionary, 9th edition. Elsevier Health Sciences. p. 1746. ISBN 978-0323112581.
  2. ^ Charles Sinclair (January 2009). Dictionary of Food: International Food and Cooking Terms from A to Z. A&C Black. ISBN 9781408102183.
  3. ^ "Spoons give wrong medicine doses". NHS UK. 15 July 2010. Archived from the original on 11 November 2020. Retrieved 21 February 2020.
  4. ^ T. S. Eliot's poem The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock mentions coffee spoons: "For I have known them all already, known them all: / Have known the evenings, mornings, afternoons, / I have measured out my life with coffee spoons;"
  5. ^ Pettigrew 2001, p. 84.
  6. ^ a b c d Ukers 1935, p. 448.
  7. ^ a b Pettigrew 2001, p. 37.
  8. ^ Veitgh 1923, p. 121.
  9. ^ "Home : Oxford English Dictionary". oed.com.
  10. ^ "London Gazette Issue 2203 27 December 1686 page 2 'three small gilded Tea Spoons'".
  11. ^ Pettigrew 2001, p. 25.
  12. ^ Pettigrew 2001, p. 81.
  13. ^ a b Pettigrew 2001, p. 85.
  14. ^ Roth 1961, p. 72.
  15. ^ In German and Dutch, teaspoon is abbreviated TL, for Teelöffel and Theelepel respectively.
  16. ^ Falagas et al. 2010, p. 1185.
  17. ^ 21 CFR (Code of Federal Regulations) 101.9(b)(5)(viii)
  18. ^ "How to Convert Cup to Tablespoon?". Airo. 8 June 2016. Archived from the original on 17 June 2016. Retrieved 16 June 2016.
  19. ^ 21CFR101.9(b)(5)(viii) 2 1CFR101.9
  20. ^ Page 665, Enquire Within upon Everything (1894)
  21. ^ Souter, Keith (2013). The Tea Cyclopedia. Skyhorse Publishing. p. 92. ISBN 9781628735482.
  22. ^ Grigson 2007, p. xviii.
  23. ^ Baggett 2012.
  24. ^ a b c BBC 1945.
  25. ^ Collister 2012.
  26. ^ Henderson & Gellatly 2008.
  27. ^ Lincoln 1903, p. 24.
  28. ^ Robert Borneman Ludy (1907). Answers to questions prescribed by pharmaceutical state boards. J.J. McVey. p. 125.
  29. ^ Dr. Collins (1803). Practical rules for the management and medical treatment of Negro slaves in the sugar colonies. Printed by J. Barfield, for Vernor and Hood. p. 465.
  30. ^ Alexander Whitelaw, ed. (1884). The popular encyclopedia; or, 'Conversations Lexicon'. p. 11.
  31. ^ Henri Milne-Edwards; Pierre Henri L.D. Vavasseur (1831). A manual of materia medica and pharmacy, from the Fr. of H.M. Edwards and P. Vavasseur, corrected by J. Davies. p. 12.
  32. ^ Tea.co.uk. (2020). UK Tea & Infusions Association – Illicit Tea Trades. [online] Available at: https://www.tea.co.uk/tea-smuggling [Accessed 1 February 2020].
  33. ^ Robert Eglesfeld Griffith (1859). A universal formulary: containing the methods of preparing and administering officinal and other medicines. The whole adapted to physicians and pharmaceutists. H.C. Lea. p. 25.

Sources