You can fit 257 unpopped kernals in a 3 oz Dixi cup. If you pop them (unbuttered and unsalted) you can fit 28 flush with the rim.
If you unwisely choose to butter and sal them you can only fit about 21 in the cup.
1 cup = 8 ounces
1 ounce = 0.12 cup
55
1 cup = 8 ounces 1 ounce = 0.12 cup
8 grams in 1 cup of popped popcorn
Each kernel produces only one "bloom" when it pops, although it can break into pieces.
high i just weighed a 1/3 cup of popcorn it weighed 5g so x 3 that 15g per cupbut when i put the pieces 1 by 1 on the scale it could not recognise the weight obviously not a scientific scale lol so i would estimate it as about 15g per cup but a cup is really a measurement of size not weight (mass) so it will depend on the size of the kernels that you are eating so how well they pop.
Here are examples for oil-popped popcorn.There are:Approx 44 calories in 1 cup (0.3 oz or 8g) of oil-popped popcornApprox 55-58 calories in 1 cup (0.4 oz or 11g) of oil-popped popcorn.
Calories in one cup of popcornThere are:Approx 55-58 calories in 1 cup (0.4 oz or 11g) of oil-popped popcornApprox 44 calories in 1 cup (0.3 oz or 8g) of oil-popped popcornApprox 31-33 calories in 1 cup (0.3 oz or 8g) of air popped white popcorn.
1 quart = 4 cups 1 cup = 0.25 quart
no one knows because each bag has a diffrent amount of popcorn like 1 bag could have 124 peices of popcorn the other bag could have 84 peices of popcorn
I was just wondering this myself, needing to make 24 C of popcorn on the stove. I found a good rule of thumb is that each 1 Tablespoon of kernels will give you slightly over 1 cup of popped popcorn.
Cook them in butter, it tastes much better and healthier. 50g should be sufficient.
Approximately 2,500. I know this because I had to figure out about how much popcorn to buy for a project that used the kernels to show how many people there were in a certain population in our state. And yes, I counted out each and every one.
1-oz. net weight (approximately 2-1/2 cups of popped popcorn).