6 lbs of apples is a variable volume. Some apples are more dense, or heavier than others, however the amount of volume of apple may be relative to the recipe and being off by a small amount may not make much difference. If it does then weigh them.
6 lbs of apples generally approximate between 6 and 8 cups peeled and cored.
Depending on the size of the apples, you can expect to need about 8 Granny Smith apples to yield 6 cups of chopped apples.
30 cups is 16.5 pounds of sugar.
There are many variables when it comes to determining the number of pounds in a cup. In order to know how many pounds are in 22 cups one would need to know what material is being measured in the cups.
That would be 2.5 pounds.
"Cups" is a measure of volume; "pounds" is a measure of weight. You would need to specify the material, or at least the density of the material, for us to calculate this.
well! you need 6 cups to make 3 servings
That would depend on the type of Apples, the size of the Apples, and how well the juice has been filtered. 1 large apple equals 2 cups sliced or chopped or 1 1/2 cups finely chopped or 1 1/4 cups grated or 1/4 cup sauce. 1 medium apple equals 1 1/3 cup sliced or chopped or 1 cup finely chopped or 3/4 cup grated or 1/2 cup sauce 1 small apple equals 3/4 cup sliced or chopped or 3/4 cup finely chopped or 1/2 cup grated or 1/3 cup sauce 1 pound apples equals 4 small apples or 3 medium apples or 2 large apples 1 (9" or 10") pie equals 2 1/2 pounds (4-5 large or 6-7 medium or 8-9 small apples) peck equals 10 1/2 pounds bushel equals 42 pounds (yields 20-24 quarts of applesauce)
You need to state WHICH dried fruit tio get an answer to that
One pound of sugar equals 2 cups. So eight (8) pounds of sugar would equal 16 cups.
Well you would need 3,992,437 more apples. But what would you do with that many apples anyways!?
It's one of those funky things that settle after a while, so you can't just measure it and call it done. You'll need a scale.
Two pounds can't be measured using cups, which are measures of volume - for example, milliliters, liters, pints, or fluid ounces. You will need to specify what you need to measure to discover how many ounces fit in one cup; depending on the goods being measured you might also need to specify whether it will be tightly or loosely packed.