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Equivalent ratios: recipe

Adjusting a cake recipe for different guest numbers involves understanding ratios. Halving ingredients for a smaller cake maintains the same ratio, like eggs to flour (4:3). Ratios ensure consistent taste and quality, regardless of cake size.

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Video transcript

- [Instructor] Right over here, we have the recipe for super cake, which you want to make for your guests that are coming over for dinner tonight. But this recipe right over here, this is for 32 people. This would serve 32 folks. But, you only have 16 guests coming over. So, if you only have 16 guests coming over, what should be your ingredients here? How much of each of these ingredients should you have? I encourage you to pause the video and think about it. Right now, we're gonna think about, well, we're gonna have a slightly smaller super cake. Smaller super, super cake. You might have reasoned that, "Look, if we're going to have half as many guests, "then each of the ingredients, "we should just have half as much." And you would be right. Instead of eight eggs, for our smaller super cake, you could have four eggs. Instead of six cups of flour, in our smaller super cake, you could have three cups of flour. Instead of six cups of sugar, you could have three cups of sugar. I'm just taking half of each of these numbers. Instead of two cups of butter, you could have one cup of butter. Instead of six teaspoons of baking soda, you could have three teaspoons of baking soda. And, last but not least, instead of two cups of water, you could have one cup of water. Now, this will work and this is actually how you should adjust recipes. But there's something interesting about what's similar about these two recipes. The recipe for the main super cake that feeds 32 people and the recipe for the smaller super cake. And that's the notion of ratios. The ratios between ingredients or the ratio of how much of an ingredient you need for given guests. For example, you can see here that for every eight eggs, you have six cups of flour. So, let me write this down. So, for every eight eggs we have six cups of flour. We have six cups of flour. Which can be expressed as a ratio of, the ratio of eggs to flour is 8:6. Which is, once again, interpreted as for every eight eggs, I have six cups of flour. If I said for every six cups of flour, I have eight eggs, I would've written 6:8. So, the order here matters. But here I'm saying the ratio of eggs to flour, of eggs to cups of flour is 8:6. For every eight eggs, I have six cups of flour. Well, what about for the smaller cake? Well, here, for every four eggs, for every four eggs, we have three cups of flour. We have three cups of flour. So, what would this ratio be? Well, for every four eggs, we have three cups of flour. So, the ratio of eggs to flour is 4:3. Now, turns out that these are the exact same ratio. If you have eight eggs for every six cups of flour, or for every eight eggs you have six cups of flour, that's the same thing as for every four eggs, you have three cups of flour. What you're just doing is taking each of these numbers and you are dividing it by two. So, you could say the ratio in either case, the ratio of eggs to flour, let me write this down. The ratio of eggs, eggs, to two cups of flour. Let me write two cups of flour. Cups of flour. In either case is, is four eggs for every three cups of flour. This is going to be true for either recipe. You have the same ratio. If you have eight eggs here, so, for every four eggs, you have three cups of flour. Well, that means your going to have six cups of flour. This is why ratios are helpful. This recipe has a different number of eggs, a different number of cups of flour, a different number of cups of sugar. But the ratios between the ingredients are the same. So, you will be able to have a cake that tastes the same, that essentially is the same cake but just is a different size.