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12oz/dry pint, according to the California Department of Food and Agriculture. It is important to note that a dry pint (how blueberries are sold) is 16.36% larger than a the more commonly used liquid pint (2 cup measure). A liquid pint of blueberries would weigh approximately 10.3oz (292g), which is about 145g/cup. A flat (tray) of blueberries (12 dry pints) should weigh approximately 9lbs (sans containers). Update: I just weighed several level dry pints of freshly picked blueberries. 12oz - 12.5oz each. I’d say 12oz/dry pint is a good figure to use.
I am researching this question too. I just bought a dry pint of blueberries and it has 12 oz. of blueberries by weight. This translates to 3/4 of a pund. Although, I thought a dry pint is supposed to have 2.33 cups by volume, when I measured it there was only 2 cups of blueberries. The package is labeled drypint. I don't know if it differs from those that are labeled with just pint. I am researching further. -Trent http:/blog.smartshopit.com My husband and I sell blueberries...we have a 2 acre patch. We sell by the pound and are constantly getting this question. You have a liquid pint measurement and dry pint measure...liquid only translates to 2 cups...dry pint, or 2 cups, translates to 12 ounces.....you definitely get more bang for your buck if you buy by the pound!! ~!Marilyn/njquilts
That is approximately 3/4 cup
I am researching this question too. I just bought a dry pint of blueberries and it has 12 oz. of blueberries by weight. This translates to 3/4 of a pund. Although, I thought a dry pint is supposed to have 2.33 cups by volume, when I measured it there was only 2 cups of blueberries. The package is labeled drypint. I don't know if it differs from those that are labeled with just pint. I am researching further. -Trent http:/blog.smartshopit.com My husband and I sell blueberries...we have a 2 acre patch. We sell by the pound and are constantly getting this question. You have a liquid pint measurement and dry pint measure...liquid only translates to 2 cups...dry pint, or 2 cups, translates to 12 ounces.....you definitely get more bang for your buck if you buy by the pound!! ~!Marilyn/njquilts
Pints, liquid or dry, are a measure of volume and ounces are a measure of weight, so they cannot be compared. However, a liquid pint is .4732 l and a dry pint is .551 l, so the dry pint is 1.164 liquid pints. Since a liquid pint is 16 fluid ounces, you could measure a dry pint as 18.63 fluid ounces.
by smoking it on fire.
A dry pint: a United States dry unit equal to 0.5 quart or 33.6 cubic inches pint United States dry unit . A unit of measurement of capacity for dry substances.
A pint is a liquid or dry measure of sixteen ounces, 0.454 kilograms of weight, about 35 cubic inches, and is half of a quart. For liquid, a British pint is equal to 0.568 liters and a US pint is equal to 0.473 liters. For dry, a US pint is equal to 0.5506 liters. In some areas (such as Great Britain), "a pint" refers to a pint of beer.
Food should be stored in clean, dry containers.
The words "dry measure" complicate and confound the question somewhat. There is no such thing as a dry cup. But there is a dry pint and a liquid pint. And since you said TWO cups dry measure, that implies a dry pint. One dry pint is equal to about 18.6 fluid ounces. (A liquid pint [US] is equal to 16 fluid ounces.) So, multiply 18.6 by 0.15 (15 percent) to get 2.79 ounces, or slightly more than two and three-quarters ounces. 15 percent of 16 is 2.4 ounces.
1 pint [US,dry] = 2.3272943877 cup [US].
A pint is a pint is a pint in volume. However 16 oz in a pint is 16 oz in a pound only if it is water. A pint of flour does not weigh a pound as it is not as dense as water. A pint or 16 ounces dry measure of all-purpose flour weighs about 10 ounces (.625 of a pound) Chef Instructor Wayne Wilberding