Good question. So one tablespoon of shortening contains 13 grams, according to nutritiondata.com. 1/4 teaspoon is 1/12 of a tablespoon, and about as precise as you're going to get to 1/13 of a tablespoon with kitchen measuring utensils. So a little less than a quarter teaspoon of shortening is what a gram of fat looks like.
lets see a gram is a peperclip so about 50g
The package states that there is less than 1 gram of Carbs in a 1 serving (1 TBSP), but it does not say how much less than one gram. In 1 cup there is less than 16 grams of carbs.
too easy ?
butter. gram. cod liver. vegetable oil. ghee
For pure water one can say: 1 milliliter of water weighs 1 gram. 1 milliliter of vegetable oil weighs a bit less.
Lets see... 5 Milometers is a gram i think... maybe about 5...
204 calories in 400 gram tin of cream of chicken
Yes all matter has mass. A cubic centimeter of water has a mass of one gram.
Yes, though it is not easy to think of a situation where it would be useful.
Lets say, for example the enthalpy is equal to 1200 joules/gram. You take 1200 joules/gram * (# of grams)/one mole [now you can cancel grams and it is now joules/mole.] Then convert the answer to kilojoules by dividing by 1000.
There are 70 calories, 1 gram of fat (0.5 saturated), 930 milligrams of sodium and 11 carbohydrates.
1g = 6 x 1023 amu (near enough). The maths from there is easy