you can rub the potato chips on a brown paper towel
inches
Mostly taste because of all the extra fat in the chips. I recommend Baked Lay's if you're on a diet and using a food scale to measure each serving.
One cup of Chocolate Chips would be equal to about 160 grams. You can measure it accurately by using a food scale.
Observe the weight measure on the bag that the chips are in. Example: If the bag has a net weight of four (4.0) ounces, then one quarter of the bag will be one ounce... etc. 1 ounce = approx 11 chips it is approx 28 gms ( its all depends on the thickness of chips)
I think you could measure it and than it could tell you the answers
we need a chocolate bar (a twix to be exact), a packet of chips and a bottle of beer!
we need a chocolate bar (a twix to be exact), a packet of chips and a bottle of beer!
I weighed 200 cubic centimetres of milk chocolate chips at a temperature of 22.5 C and the mass was 145g. That means that the density is 0.725g/cubic centimetre. However the density may vary if you are talking about dark or white chocolate chips. This is a measure of the density of Milk chocolate chips.
no, chips are chips
What weighs more, a pound of gold or a pound of feathers? The answer is: they weigh the same, which is to say they are both one pound in weight.Now, imagine how much space one pound of gold would occupy. It would be approximately as big as a 1-lb dumbbell, which could easily fit in one hand. On the contrary, how big would one pound of feathers be? The answer, like with your chips, is that it depends.The reason why there is no answer to your question is because there is no way to ensure that the chips that I measure are the same size and density of the chips that you measure. Something light and fluffy will weigh less than something harder or thicker. The top of the bag will have intact chips, which will occupy more space than the smaller pieces and crumbs at the bottom.In conclusion, cups measure volume, whereas ounces (when measuring solid matter) measure weight. They aren't the same thing, nor does there exist quick conversions for people who know nothing about measurements.
Chips are high in fat, which means that they're high in calories - and the main goal of any diet is to reduce the amounts of calories that you eat daily.Chips obviously won't measure up as a particularly sensible choice in the circumstances.If you want to eat chips, then you have to make room for that by adjusting the rest of your diet accordingly. You can probably fit in a small bowl of chips if the rest of the meals that day are really strict.