According to Kraft Baker's Chocolate one 1 ounce square equals 3 tablespoons of chocolate (cocoa and butter, no sugar). so an 8 ounce package = 1 1/2 cups and 1 pound = 3 cups, add sugar or milk and these volumes are decreased by as much as half as these are denser materials.
That is 2 cups
It's about 1.1 cups or 1 cup 2 tbs. This recipe (http://www.joyofbaking.com/ChocolateChipCookies.html) says 1 1/2 cups chocolate chips = 270g. so 200g*1.5cups/270g= 1.1 cups.
30 pounds
1 cup of semi-sweet chocolate chips weighs approximately 0.39 pounds.
Well, honey, 400 grams of chocolate chips is roughly 2.4 cups. But let's be real, who actually measures chocolate chips in cups? Just grab a scale and weigh those bad boys out for accuracy. Happy baking!
250 grams of flour is 2 cups.(the link shows where I got my answer)
Chocolate chips are for one pound.
There are 8 fluid ounces in a cup, so a 16-ounce can of Hershey's chocolate syrup would contain 2 cups of syrup. This conversion is based on the fact that 1 cup is equivalent to 8 fluid ounces. Therefore, you would find 2 cups of Hershey's chocolate syrup in a 16-ounce can.
The correct answer is 2 cups. So, the implication of the statements above are that the oz referred to are measures of weight. eg. "3/4 of a pound of chocolate chips occupies a volume of 2 cups"
one and one third of a cup is the answer.
Well, darling, 18 ounces of chocolate chips is equivalent to 2 and 1/2 cups. So, if you're whipping up some cookies and need to know how many cups of chocolate chips to throw in, there you have it. Just don't blame me if you end up eating all the dough before it even makes it to the oven.
Twelve ounces of chocolate chips nearly equals two cups. I took a bag of chocolate chips and poured it into a one cup measurement twice and found that I had just under two cups of chocolate chips.