Actually, that is less than a serving of rice. So, no.
1000 grains of rice equals 23 g of rice. So 4330 would be about equal to one serving which is 3.5 oz. So 618 grains are in 0.5 oz. So in a 12 oz bottle it would have about 14832 grains of rice. Remember, this is an estimate.
Well 3410 feet is 4310 feet but 3410 yards would be 12930 feet and 4310 inches would be 359.1666666666667 feet.
Different styles of rice weigh slightly different amounts. We measured white long grain rice, and 1 gram of this rice was approximately 49 grains.
A very rough approximation would be in the order of 1023 atoms, ie a 1 followed by 23 zeros, which is a very big number. Given that there are over 10^21 atoms in a large grain of sand, weighing 0.03g there will be a lot more (maybe x10 or x100) in a grain of rice (which is much larger than a grain of sand). Note that rice is organic so will have a lot of hydrogen atoms as well as carbon, oxygen, nitrogen, and many others in lesser degree. The previously stated answer of "30,000 atoms in one grain of rice" is absurd. Either the poster is testing how long it takes for an incorrect answer to be fixed or is quite ignorant of atomic dimensions (or both!).
The starch in rice, corn, and many grains is made of amylose and amylopectin. These are two types of complex carbohydrates that make up the bulk of the starch molecules in these foods. Amylose is a linear molecule, while amylopectin is branched.
A lot!
About 50,000 grains of rice would fill a one-liter bottle.
10 grains of rice is 10 grains of rice
yes. it is much healthier than white rice because it contains whole grains. it has a lot of protein.
Probably a lot! It really depends on how much rice a package contains. Different brands vary.
The rice grains we buy are dehydrated. They absorb a lot of water when we cook them.
2.23 pounds of rice are present in 155320 grains of rice.
There are precisely 5,539 grains of rice in a handful.
There are about 49 grains of rice in a gram.
rice grains are a lot bigger than flour particles. A sieve will fix it.
679
No, it does not.