Oh, dude, you're really asking the hard-hitting questions today! So, technically, there are about 4.2 cups of icing sugar in a kilogram. But like, who's really measuring their icing sugar in cups when you can just dump it in and hope for the best, am I right? Happy baking, my friend!
Icing sugar is not normally measured by the ml, since mls are designed for liquids only. ( Measuring icing sugar by the mil is highly inadvisable due to the large potential for inaccuracies.) It would be best to find a weight measurement for icing sugar to convert to cups, if the measurement must be in cups.
That is 3.086 cups.
To convert grams of icing sugar to cups, you can use the approximate conversion of 1 cup of icing sugar weighing about 120 grams. Therefore, 450 grams of icing sugar is roughly 3.75 cups. This can vary slightly based on the method of packing and the specific brand of icing sugar.
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One cup is 250 gm. -So 500 gm is about 2 cups.
There is 5 1/4 cups of white sugar in a kilogram. There is 5 cups of brown sugar in a kilogram.
That is 4 cups.
That is approximately 4.4 cups
A four kilogram bag of white sugar should have about 17.5 cups of sugar in it. If it is a four kilogram bag of brown sugar, then it should have about 20 cups in it.
The number of cups in a bag of icing sugar depends on the size of the bag. A standard 2-pound bag of icing sugar typically contains about 7 to 8 cups. If you have a different size, such as a 1-pound bag, it would contain around 3 to 4 cups. Always check the packaging for precise measurements.
When measuring sugar, 1 cup is regarded as 128 grams so there are 7.8 cups to 1 kilogram. You won't go far wrong to use 8 cups to 1 kilogram as a simpler conversion.
'120g of sugar is equal to how many cup