100g Cheese Protein — 24.5 g | Nutrition Calculator
100g of Cheese, Dry White, Queso Seco contains 24.5 g of protein. Free converter with serving tables, volume conversion, raw vs cooked, and FAQs. Data from USDA FoodData Central.
100g Cheese Protein Calculator
Result
100g Cheese Protein
24.5 g protein
Computed from 100 g of food and USDA FoodData Central Foundation Foods.
Reverse Calculation
Protein target to food amount
100 g (3.53 oz, 0.42 cups)
Reverse math uses 24.5 g protein per 100 g from USDA FoodData Central Foundation Foods.
Cheese Macros by Serving Size
Cheese Macros by Common Serving
Cheese Protein Range Around 100g
Cheese Macros by Volume Measure
Cheese Prep-State Logging Check
Cheese Nutrient Efficiency Per Calorie
Cheese Dietary Profile
High-protein: Cheese delivers 24.5g protein per 100g — qualifies as a high-protein food (≥20g/100g threshold).
Keto-compatible: Low in net carbs (2.07g/100g), making it suitable for ketogenic diets.
Vegetarian: No meat or fish.
Gluten-free: Safe for celiac and gluten-sensitive individuals.
Common meal contexts: high-protein meal.
Cheese Benefit Signals
- Protein dense: Useful when building a high-protein meal or snack. Basis: Protein per 100g is at least 20g..
Cheese Daily Nutrient Coverage
Smart Protein Substitutes for Cheese
Cheese Condition-Aware Nutrition Notes
Real-World Cheese Serving Sizes
- cup (~97.3g): 23.8 g protein. cup is listed by USDA at 97.3g for this food.
- RACC (~30g): 7.4 g protein. RACC is listed by USDA at 30g for this food.
Common Cheese Measurement Mistakes
- Logging a different prep state than the food actually eaten can change calories and macro density.
- Sauces, oil, breading, and added ingredients are not included unless they are part of this USDA food description.
- Assuming every household serving has the same gram weight; use the listed serving anchors when available.
Cheese Protein — Frequently Asked Questions
How to Calculate Cheese Protein
- Weigh raw. Place your cheese on a kitchen scale before cooking to get the most accurate starting weight.
- Enter weight into the calculator. Select your unit (g, oz, lb, or cup) and hit Calculate.
- Read the result. The calculator shows protein content for your exact portion.
- Compare servings. Use the serving range table below to quickly compare protein across portion sizes.
- Log to your tracker. Enter the raw weight and raw entry in your nutrition app for consistent macro tracking.
Why Volume ≠ Weight: Cheese Density Explained
Cheese is dense (~1000 kg/m³ ≈ water). A 1-cup measure holds approximately 237 g. This aligns with the common culinary anchor: "cup" = 97.3 g (cup is listed by USDA at 97.3g for this food.)
Why does density matter? The same volume can hold very different amounts of food depending on how dense it is. Oats (350 kg/m³) are light and airy — 1 cup = ~80 g. Water has a density of 1000 kg/m³ — 1 cup = 236 g. This is why nutrition labels use weight (grams), not volume — it's a more reliable measure.
Formula: mass (g) = volume (mL) × density (kg/m³) ÷ 1,000. This calculator uses this formula automatically when you enter a volume measure for Cheese.
Cheese Page Quality Signals
Data Sources & Methodology
Data source: USDA FoodData Central. Referenced entries: Cheese, Dry White, Queso Seco (FDC ID: 746765).
Computation method: Macro values are calculated by multiplying the food's per-100g value by the requested weight in grams, then dividing by 100. Volume inputs are first converted to grams using the food's density (kg/m³) from USDA data, then the same formula applies: protein = (weight_g / 100) × proteinPer100g.
Accuracy note: Macro values represent averages across measured samples; individual items may vary ±5–10% depending on brand, farming method, and preparation technique. For clinical nutrition, consult a registered dietitian.
Update policy: Macro values are reviewed quarterly against USDA FoodData Central updates. Page last verified: 2026.