There are four cups of flour in one pound.
3.6 cups
If One Cup of Flour = 4 ounces, then there are 4 Cups to One Pound of Flour.
If One Cup of Flour = 5 ounces, then there are 3 Cups 1 Ounce to One Pound of Flour.
If One Cup of Flour = 6 ounces, then there are 2-2/3 Cups to One Pound of Flour.
Flour Measurement: Dry Measures, Volume or Weight vs. Accuracy
Weighing flour is the most accurate method of proportioning to a given recipe. It is also the best method to successfully repeat the desired product. However, most recipes list volumetric values, such as cups. It does not mean that the recipe is unmakable, only that one must use extra steps to maintain proportions with reasonable uncertainty (better than guessing). There are guidelines for measuring cups of flour and its use lessens the chance for error. A guideline is listed in the next section.
Other factors affecting volumetric measurements are flour texture, such as grain size and compaction. Sifting flour reduces compaction.
Humidity affects both methods of measurement.
OK - this is where it gets a bit messy; using approximate US to SI conversions:
(Reference: One ounce(U.S. liquid) = 29.57 milliliters; One dry quart(U.S.)= 1.1 liters(SI) = 550.61 ml(SI))
One Pound(U.S. dry) = 16 ounces(U.S. dry)= 454 grams(SI)
One Ounce(U.S. dry) = 28.35 grams(SI)
One Cup(U.S.dry) of Flour ~ 4 to 6 ounces(U.S. dry)or 113.4 to 170.1 grams(SI)
Conclusion:
If One Cup of Flour = 4 ounces, then there are 4 Cups to One Pound of Flour.
If One Cup of Flour = 5 ounces, then there are 3 Cups 1 Ounce to One Pound of Flour.
If One Cup of Flour = 6 ounces, then there are 2-2/3 Cups to One Pound of Flour.
Not all dry ingredients are created equal. One pound of all-purpose flour would yield 3.5 cups. One pound of unsifted confectioners sugar would yield 3 3/4 cups, and one pound of granulated sugar would yield 2 cups.
The cup is a measurement of volume, while the pound is a measurement of weight. Therefore, one must know the specific density of the substance in question in order to convert one to the other.
A cup is a measure of volume, and a pound is a measure of weight, so there is no standard answer (you would have to know the density of the dry ingredient to figure out how many cups a pound's-worth of the ingredient takes up volume-wise, i.e a cup of feathers versus a cup of lead - same volume, different weight).
It all depends upon the DENSITY (or one may call it heaviness) of the liquid. Try it yourself with water. You will need a scale. Water weight about 8.33 pound per gallon, so one quart weighs about 2.08 pounds. That means half of a quart (2 cups) weight about 1 pound. Try it with a scale for water, they try milk.
There are 16 ounces in a pound (solid)! There are 8 ounces in a cup (liquid)!
one cup silly
2 2/3
I think it should be 7/16 of a pound
I measured 7 loose cups in a 32oz bag, so between 3 and 3.5 per dry pound (16oz) depending on how you like to pack it.
In a pound of dry whole milk powder there is 3.56 cups. In a pound of non-fat milk powder there are 3.76 cups.
Approximately 3.6 cups to a pound of dry bowtie pasta.
About 2.4 cups
A one-pound package of dry beans equals about 2 cups dry, or 5-6 cups cooked.
Approximately 3.68 cups
about 100 cups
Small dry macaroni is about 3.6 cups to the pound
A one pound bag of beans has about 2 cups of uncooked beans. When cooked it is 5-6 cups.
About 2.56 cups
It depends, but it is usually 4 cups.
That is approximately 12.863 cups
2 cups