Use a medicine syringe for making dilutions. I have found a syringe in the drug store that has a plunger using the polyethylene as the stopper, not an extra rubber stopper piece. This works very well and I don't have problems with the rubber binding up over time. The syringe is with some pill boxes, thermometers, and other such 'stock' medicine supplies on the shelves. Or ask the pharmacist for a syringe.
I decant the stock into 4 ounce glass bottles (funnel needed), then a working 2 ounce HDPE bottle with a wide mouth, made by Nalgene. The wide mouth accepts the syringe without any need for tilting or otherwise making a mess with the included reducing bushing. I measure, squirt into the water, then pull water back in and flush the syringe with the developing solution to dissolve the syrup. Then be sure to stir the developing water, as the syrup can go to the bottom and not get mixed in well.
I use HC-110 at 1:100 dilution with 120 Fuji Neopan Acros 100. Love it. 10 minutes, 20C, agitate 6x every minute. My other film standard is TMax 400 developed in Rodinal at 1:50, 8 minutes, both 35mm and 120 sizes. I tried HC-110 on 35mm and found things way too soft for my taste. All in all, with some adjustments (in... dare I say? scanning and PS), I can go from the TMax-Rodinal combo and the Acros-HC110 combo without gross differences in look.