A solid start is 1 bouillon cube or 1 teaspoon granules per 1 cup hot water, then adjust to the dish.
Bouillon is one of those pantry staples that can save dinner. It can also wreck it if the mix is off. Too weak and your soup tastes like hot water. Too strong and all you get is salt.
This article gives you clear starting amounts for the common bouillon forms (cubes, granules, paste, liquid concentrate), then shows how to tweak the mix based on what you’re cooking. You’ll end up with broth that tastes steady and balanced, without guesswork.
Why “Per Cup” Is The Only Number That Matters
Most bouillon labels give directions for a full cup of broth. That makes sense because it’s a common unit for soups, rice, and sauces. Once you trust your “per cup” baseline, scaling becomes simple.
There’s one catch: bouillon isn’t a single product. One brand’s cube can be saltier than another brand’s cube. Pastes and liquid concentrates can be stronger still. So think of the amounts below as a starting point, not a promise.
What Changes The Strength Of Bouillon
Four things change how much bouillon you need:
- Form: Cube, granules, paste, or liquid concentrate all dissolve and measure differently.
- Salt level: “Reduced sodium” mixes can need more for the same savory hit.
- Use case: A sipping broth wants a fuller taste than broth used to thin a sauce.
- Simmer time: Long simmers can concentrate liquid and boost saltiness.
Start with the baseline, then adjust with small changes. A little shift goes a long way.
How Much Bouillon Per Cup? Standard Starting Points
Use hot water so it dissolves fast. Stir well, then taste once it’s fully melted. If you’re making soup, taste again after you add salty ingredients like canned beans, cheese, soy sauce, cured meats, or salted butter.
Starting amounts By Form
These amounts aim for a “general-purpose broth” that works in most cooking:
- Cubes: 1 cube per 1 cup water (some brands use 1 cube per 2 cups, so check the label).
- Granules: 1 teaspoon per 1 cup water.
- Paste (jarred concentrate): 1 teaspoon per 1 cup water.
- Liquid concentrate: 1 teaspoon per 1 cup water.
If your broth tastes flat, add bouillon in small pinches or a tiny dab at a time, stir, then taste again. If it’s too salty, dilute with water and bring it back to a simmer.
Quick measuring tips That Prevent Mistakes
- Level your teaspoon for granules and paste. Heaping spoons can double the salt.
- Crush cubes before dissolving if you only need half. A clean spoon or the back of a knife works.
- Mix bouillon with a splash of hot water first if you’re adding it to a pot of soup. That helps it spread evenly.
When To Use Less Bouillon Per Cup
Sometimes you want a lighter broth on purpose. Try using about three-quarters of your normal bouillon amount when:
- You’ll reduce the liquid later (pan sauce, braise, gravy base).
- You’re using salty add-ins (ham, bacon, feta, olives, miso, soy sauce).
- You’re cooking pasta, rice, or grains that will soak up the broth and then get topped with salty food.
In these cases, build taste later with a small extra dab right before serving. That keeps you from oversalting early.
Table: Bouillon Per Cup Cheat Sheet
This table gives a clear starting line for the most common products. Use it for a one-cup mug of broth, a pot of soup, or as your base for scaling.
| Form | Starting amount For 1 cup water | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Standard cube | 1 cube | Some brands rate 1 cube for 2 cups; label beats any chart. |
| Half cube | 1/2 cube | Good for rice, quinoa, and lighter soups. |
| Granules | 1 teaspoon | Stir well; granules can cling to the bottom of the mug. |
| Low-sodium granules | 1 to 1 1/2 teaspoons | Taste after it dissolves; brands vary a lot. |
| Paste concentrate | 1 teaspoon | Dissolve in hot water first to avoid streaks in soup. |
| Liquid concentrate | 1 teaspoon | Measure carefully; it pours fast and can overshoot. |
| Seasoned bouillon (tomato, garlic, herb) | 3/4 to 1 teaspoon | Often carries extra seasoning that can dominate a dish. |
| Homemade concentrate (salted) | Start with 1/2 teaspoon | Homemade mixes can run salty; creep up slowly. |
Salt, Nutrition Labels, And Smarter Choices
Bouillon is flavor plus salt. If you’re watching sodium, the label is your best friend. A cube or teaspoon may carry a large chunk of the daily value, and brands can differ a lot.
If you want a clean way to compare products, check the sodium line on the FDA’s Nutrition Facts label explainer. It helps you read serving sizes and daily value so you can spot a salt-heavy product fast.
You can also look up a product’s nutrition profile through USDA FoodData Central. It’s handy when you want a second source for calories and sodium, or when you’re comparing several brands.
Flavor without piling on salt
If your broth tastes salty before it tastes savory, don’t add more bouillon. Add aroma and depth instead:
- Sauté onion or scallion in a little oil, then add your broth.
- Add a clove of garlic, smashed, then remove it later.
- Drop in a bay leaf, then pull it after 15–20 minutes.
- Add a splash of lemon at the end for lift.
Those moves change the taste without pushing sodium higher.
Best Bouillon Ratios For Common Cooking Jobs
Soup and stew bases
Use your standard “per cup” mix. If you’re adding store-bought broth too, start with less bouillon. Taste after the pot simmers and the ingredients release their own salt.
Rice, quinoa, and grains
Grains absorb the broth, so the taste ends up stronger than the liquid tasted at the start. Use about three-quarters of your normal bouillon amount per cup of cooking liquid, then season at the end if needed.
Pan sauces and gravies
These often reduce. Start light. You can always whisk in a small pinch of granules near the end, once the sauce is close to its final thickness.
Vegetables
For boiling or steaming water, a lighter mix works well. If you use a full-strength mix, the vegetables can take on a salty edge.
Sipping broth
If you’re drinking a mug, you may want a fuller taste than “cooking broth.” Start with your standard amount, then bump it up in tiny steps until it tastes right to you. A squeeze of lemon or a pinch of chili flakes can help without adding more salt.
How To Scale Bouillon Without Guesswork
Scaling is just multiplication once your baseline tastes right. Decide how many cups you need, then multiply the per-cup amount. If you’re using cubes and the number isn’t whole, crush the cube and measure by halves or quarters.
One practical habit: mix your bouillon in a measuring jug first, then pour it into the pot. It keeps the ratio steady and stops undissolved lumps from hiding in the bottom of a saucepan.
Table: Scaling Bouillon For Bigger Batches
This table assumes a standard baseline: 1 cube per cup, or 1 teaspoon granules/paste per cup. If your brand calls for 1 cube per 2 cups, cut the cube column in half.
| Final broth volume | Cubes | Granules or paste |
|---|---|---|
| 2 cups | 2 cubes | 2 teaspoons |
| 4 cups (1 quart) | 4 cubes | 4 teaspoons (1 tablespoon + 1 teaspoon) |
| 6 cups | 6 cubes | 6 teaspoons (2 tablespoons) |
| 8 cups (2 quarts) | 8 cubes | 8 teaspoons (2 tablespoons + 2 teaspoons) |
| 10 cups | 10 cubes | 10 teaspoons (3 tablespoons + 1 teaspoon) |
| 12 cups (3 quarts) | 12 cubes | 12 teaspoons (4 tablespoons) |
| 16 cups (1 gallon) | 16 cubes | 16 teaspoons (5 tablespoons + 1 teaspoon) |
| 20 cups | 20 cubes | 20 teaspoons (6 tablespoons + 2 teaspoons) |
Fixes For Broth That Went Sideways
It’s too salty
- Dilute: Add hot water, stir, then taste.
- Add bulk: Toss in unsalted potatoes, rice, or extra vegetables to spread the salt across more food.
- Balance: A squeeze of lemon or a splash of vinegar can cut the “salty” edge.
It tastes flat
- Add a small pinch of granules or a tiny dab of paste, stir, then taste again.
- Add aroma: garlic, onion, ginger, bay leaf, pepper, or herbs.
- Add body: a spoon of tomato paste, a bit of gelatin-rich stock, or a longer simmer with bones (if you’re making soup from scratch).
There are gritty bits
Granules can clump. Use hotter water, whisk, and give it a minute. If you’re adding granules to a pot, mix them in a small cup of hot water first, then pour that into the pot.
Storage And Food Safety For Bouillon Broth
Dry bouillon lasts a long time when sealed and kept dry. Once you mix it into broth, treat it like any other cooked food.
Cool broth fast, refrigerate it, and reheat it to a full simmer before eating. For general storage timing and safe cooling habits, the USDA leftovers and food safety page is a solid reference.
Small Moves That Make Bouillon Taste Better
If bouillon broth tastes one-note, it often needs lift, not more bouillon. Try one of these at the end:
- A squeeze of lemon or lime.
- A few drops of toasted sesame oil.
- A pinch of black pepper.
- Fresh herbs stirred in right before serving.
If you’re watching sodium, you can keep bouillon lower and still get a satisfying bowl by adding umami from mushrooms, tomatoes, browned onions, or a long simmer with vegetables.
For a wider view on daily sodium intake targets, the World Health Organization sodium intake guideline gives a clear benchmark that can help you plan meals across the day.
Putting It All Together In Your Kitchen
Start with a standard per-cup mix, then match it to what you’re cooking. Lighten it for reductions and grains. Keep it steady for soups. Taste after salty ingredients go in. If the broth is close, stop and build depth with aromatics instead of dumping in more bouillon.
Once you dial in the baseline for your favorite brand, write it on the jar or keep a note in your phone. Next time you cook, you’ll move fast and your broth will taste the same every time.
References & Sources
- U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA).“How to Understand and Use the Nutrition Facts Label.”Explains serving sizes and sodium daily value so readers can compare bouillon labels.
- USDA FoodData Central.“FoodData Central.”Database for checking nutrition entries like sodium and calories across food items and brands.
- USDA Food Safety and Inspection Service (FSIS).“Leftovers and Food Safety.”Outlines safe cooling, storage, and reheating habits for prepared broth and soups.
- World Health Organization (WHO).“Guideline: Sodium Intake for Adults and Children.”Provides sodium intake benchmarks that help readers fit bouillon into a day’s total salt intake.
