Only for a very tiny house with GIANT potatoes. You would only get a few milliamps out of a potato, so 100 potatoes are a few hundred milliamps. Just enough to light up a few LEDs.
The Sole Power Of the whole Impeachment.
I just had whole sweet potatoes catch on fire while using the potato setting. My house was FILLED with smoke..the potatoes were flaming and my microwave is ruined. I am now contending with the residual smell. BEWARE.
No, whole cream is IDEAL for mashed potatoes....just add butter too!!
no? why would a whole bunch of celebritys come to your house?
That would depend on how much else you are going to be giving them and how hungry they are. Think about how many whole potatoes you could eat then multiply this by 11 for the mash.
I am looking for a window AC unit to use in my whole house. What is the BTU's one would need to cool a whole house?
Use a generator with a high enough rating to power the house, of course. Trying to power a house that draws 60A of current with a 10A generator is just never going to work.
Yes, if they are fingerling potatoes or early potatoes.
Solar electric panels can definitely produce enough electricity to power everything in your home. An "off-grid" house refers to a home that is not connected to the electrical grid and must generate its own power (usually through solar or wind). Though these houses aren't exactly common in North America, there are probably more of them than you think. The number of solar panels you would need to "power your whole house" depends on how many kilowatt hours of electricity your family uses per month.
This depends on how you are serving the potatoes and what part of the meal the potatoes will be. I would probably use one potato per person. I would also have an extra potato for every two men, and count half of a potato per child. That is if the potatoes were only part of the meal and not the whole meal. Being able to use math comes in handy. I would count the potatoes in a 10 pound bag and then decide how many to buy. I have also found that the different types of potatoes do better in different dishes.
The number of quarts in 5 pounds of potatoes can vary depending on the type of potato and how they are cut. Generally, 1 pound of potatoes is approximately equal to 1 quart when cubed. Therefore, 5 pounds of potatoes would be about 5 quarts when cubed. For whole potatoes, the volume may differ slightly, but it's a good estimate.
Depends on how big or small the slices are