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dsp? - unit of measure

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Hi gang,

 

I'm trying to make an Aloo Gobi recipe from Cranks Bible (a British

vegetarian cookbook). It calls for " 1 dsp cumin powder " . Can anyone

tell me what a dsp is? The book uses " tblsp " for tablespoon and " tsp "

for teaspoon, so that's not it. It doesn't explain this anywhere.

 

I also googled " dsp equivalent " and variations thereof, with no luck,

though I gather this measurement is also used in Australia.

 

Can anyone give me a general idea?

 

Thanks,

 

Sharon

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Did you see it more than once in the cookbook? I was wondering is it was a

typo and was really meant to be tsp.

Judy

-

Sharon Zakhour

Saturday, July 14, 2007 4:37 PM

dsp? - unit of measure

 

 

Hi gang,

 

I'm trying to make an Aloo Gobi recipe from Cranks Bible (a British

vegetarian cookbook). It calls for " 1 dsp cumin powder " . Can anyone

tell me what a dsp is? The book uses " tblsp " for tablespoon and " tsp "

for teaspoon, so that's not it. It doesn't explain this anywhere.

 

I also googled " dsp equivalent " and variations thereof, with no luck,

though I gather this measurement is also used in Australia.

 

Can anyone give me a general idea?

 

Thanks,

 

Sharon

 

 

 

 

 

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Hi Sharon

This would be a dessertspoon. This is where we run into the problem

that imperial and US spoons are different sizes. So in Imperial

measurements 2 teaspoons = 1 dessertspoon and 3 teaspoons = 1

Tablespoon. This is the result I got when I googled it:

1 Imperial dessertspoon = 2.40190083 US teaspoons

HTH

Christie

, Sharon Zakhour

<sharon.zakhour wrote:

>

> Hi gang,

>

> I'm trying to make an Aloo Gobi recipe from Cranks Bible (a British

> vegetarian cookbook). It calls for " 1 dsp cumin powder " . Can

anyone

> tell me what a dsp is? The book uses " tblsp " for tablespoon

and " tsp "

> for teaspoon, so that's not it. It doesn't explain this anywhere.

>

> I also googled " dsp equivalent " and variations thereof, with no

luck,

> though I gather this measurement is also used in Australia.

>

> Can anyone give me a general idea?

>

> Thanks,

>

> Sharon

>

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Yes, I saw it more than once. I should have mentioned that. :-)

 

Sharon

 

wwjd wrote:

> Did you see it more than once in the cookbook? I was wondering is it was a

typo and was really meant to be tsp.

>

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THANKS, Christie! I wondered if the " d " meant double. It doesn't

exactly, but it amounts to that!

 

I'm going back upstairs to start the dish now. You saved me. :-D

 

Sharon

 

 

christie_0131 wrote:

> Hi Sharon

> This would be a dessertspoon. This is where we run into the problem

> that imperial and US spoons are different sizes. So in Imperial

> measurements 2 teaspoons = 1 dessertspoon and 3 teaspoons = 1

> Tablespoon. This is the result I got when I googled it:

> 1 Imperial dessertspoon = 2.40190083 US teaspoons

> HTH

> Christie

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