That is approximately 1.512 sticks.
Density of butter is 0.911 g /ml.185 / 0.911 = 203 ml.
This is 0.822222 cups of butter, which is a little over 13 tablespoons. 13.155 tbs, to be exact. :)
This is not a valid conversion; milligrams (mg) and grams (g) are measures of weight or mass and mL (milliliters) is a measure of volume.
Approx. one (1) stick of butter equals 100 g. ( 113g is exactly 1 stick )
185 g of nickel is equivalent to 3,152 moles.
That is about 76 teaspoons of butter.
There are 1000 g in 1 kg of butter.
1/4 cup of butter = 57 g 1/3 cup of butter = 76 g 1/2 cup of butter = 113 g 1 cup of butter = 226 g
1 stick = 1/2 a cup 1 stick = 120g 1 stick = 120ml 1 stick = 4 ounces Thus, 2 melted sticks of butter would equal a cup, in the United States. Other countries may have different sizes of sticks of butter.
[1 stick Butter = 1/4 pound = 1/2 cup = 8 tablespoons = 4 oz = 115 g] 1 "block" of butter is usually not 1 stick, but a full pound block. i.e. 1 block of butter = 4 sticks = 1 pound = 2 cups = 32 tablespoons = 16 oz = 454 g Many recipes online confuse block and stick, so if you see "block", use some common sense to decide which one is meant. In cookbooks it is nearly always the full pound block. In Europe, a standard block of butter is usually 250 g (about 9 oz.), but recipes tend to be give by weight, not volume/shape.
1 g = 1,000 mg 1 kg = 1,000,000 mg 185 kg = 185,000,000 mg
14.125 g per tablespoon of butter.