Well, honey, if you're serving green beans as a side dish, you'll need about 50 pounds of fresh green beans for 150 people. That's roughly 5 ounces per person, assuming they all want a good helping of those veggies. Just make sure to wash and trim those beans before you cook them up, and you'll have a feast fit for a crowd.
Fresh cooked green bean liquid has a brown color because of the juices of the beans reacting with heat. If you don't want as much brown color, it's better to blanch the green beans before further cooking.
For a serving size of green beans, you typically want to plan on about 1/2 cup per person as a side dish. For 50 people, you would need approximately 25 cups of green beans. This is equivalent to about 12.5 pounds of fresh green beans, assuming they are cooked and served. Adjust the amount based on whether green beans are the main vegetable or part of a larger meal.
Green beans contain about 5-7% starch by weight, depending on the variety and maturity of the beans. Starch content is typically higher in fresh green beans compared to canned or frozen varieties.
Number of people (200) times how much they get each (3 oz.) divided by how many ounces in a pound (16). 200*3/16 = 37.5 lbs of green beans.
Yes. Most green vegetables have some vitamin K. One cup of cooked green beans has approximately 20 mcg of vitamin K. Both frozen and canned beans will have less vitamin K then fresh beans.
The percentage of water in green beans is approximately 89 percent.
Ten gallons of beans will be needed to feed 300 people. It is estimated that one gallon will serve 30 to 35 people.
To determine the amount of green beans needed to serve 200 people, we first need to establish the serving size per person. Let's assume a standard serving size of 4 ounces of green beans per person. This means for 200 people, we would need 800 ounces of green beans. Converting 800 ounces to pounds (1 pound = 16 ounces) gives us 50 pounds of green beans needed to serve 200 people.
pretty much forever
You would be eating waaaay to much for that to happen.
125 ml of green beans is approximately equivalent to half a cup. This volume can vary slightly depending on whether the beans are whole or chopped, but generally, it's around 75-100 grams of green beans. If measuring canned green beans, it's advisable to drain the liquid before measuring the solids for accuracy.
pretty much any kind of beans would probably work