It isn't often I have a chance to be of assistance to C2, so I jump at this opportunity.
According to
The Food Substitutions Bible, a 1/4 oz. (8 g) pkg of active dry yeast is the same as 2-1/4 tsp or 0.6 oz (17 g) cake compressed fresh yeast.
So, if 3x17=51 g, 3 x 2.25 tsp = 6.75 tsp or 2 Tbs plus 3/4 tsp, significantly more than 1 T. He also says that one large (2oz/60g) cake of compressed fresh yeast = 3 Tbs of active dry (a conversion that accords with the first calculation).
Since this does not agree with what you found, C2, I checked other sources. Harold McGee, to my amazement, doesn't give any conversions. The
Joy of Cooking states that one package (or one scant tablespoon) of active dry yeast is equivalent to a small cake (3/5 oz.) So my "Bible" says the small cake =2.25 tsp and "Joy" says the small cake = 1 scant Tbs. Pretty scant, I guess. But in the ballpark.
My various baking books discuss the merits of different kinds of yeasts but I could only find one other formula. Precisely the same formula appears in Wayne Gisslen's
Professional Cooking and in the CIA's
The Professional Chef. They both say that to convert to active dry yeast, use only 40 percent of the weight of compressed yeast.
Hope that helps!
Good luck.
PS to Bill/SFNM: my understanding is that active dry and instant aren't the same thing. Is that correct?
Gypsy Boy
"I am not a glutton--I am an explorer of food." (Erma Bombeck)