100g Cheese Protein — 29.6 g | Nutrition Calculator
100g of Cheese, Parmesan, Grated contains 29.6 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
29.6 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 29.6 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 29.6g protein per 100g — qualifies as a high-protein food (≥20g/100g threshold).
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
- tablespoon (~7.6g): 2.2 g protein. tablespoon is listed by USDA at 7.6g for this food.
- RACC (~5g): 1.5 g protein. RACC is listed by USDA at 5g 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.
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, Parmesan, Grated (FDC ID: 325036).
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.