Depends on how much frosting is applied to a cookie and the size of the cookies.
Depends on the size. To get a pound of small cookies, you would need 20-25. To get a pound of large cookies however, you would need 10-20 cookies.
Number of Cookies The number of cookies in a pound varies according to how much each cookie weighs. A shortbread cookie, which is very light, would have many more cookies in pound than a much heavier peanut butter or chocolate chip cookie.
Typically two dozen cookies equal one pound. This number changes with the size and density of the cookies being weighed.
16
Actually, cups of frosting is a volume measure -- not a weight measure. Sometimes the weight thing works for volume and sometimes it doesn't. For instance, a cup of flour generally weighs about 5 ounces (not 8, which is the 1/2 pound). 2 cups of frosting per pound seems off somehow. A good way to check it would be to check the baking aisle at the grocery store the next time you wander through. Pick up a tub of ready-made frosting and check the serving size. I don't happen to have a tub of ready made frosting handy, or I'd give out that measure. It also might vary based on the kind of frosting. Whipped frostings will take up more volume per ounce than dense frostings like cream cheese.
Each pound equals 16 ounces. So the ten pound box equals 160 ounces. (10x16=160) To find the weight of each cookie, 160 ounces divided by 216 cookies equals .74 ounce. The answer is .74 or 74 hundredths of an ounce.
It depends on the size of each type of cookie, but assuming fairly small, standard sizes for these types of cookies, about three of each.
To what depth?
Oh, dude, three-fifths of a pound is like 0.6 pounds. So, if you had a pound of, let's say, cookies, three-fifths of that would be like 0.6 pounds of cookies. But hey, who's counting when it comes to cookies, am I right?
It's not possible to say (or even estimate) without at least knowing either the weight or size of one cookie.
There are "0.35555555556 oz" in 1 oreo.