A bag of sugar typically weighs 1kg.
A bag of sugar, a small laptop, or a small bag of rice would weigh 1kg in most homes.
that's just like asking how many grains of sand are on a beach...... what you could do is... measure the size of a grain of sugar - width, length, height and times these together to find its volume. then empty a bag of sugar and fill it with water, until where the sugar reaches when filled. pour the water into a measuring jug - you now have the volume of sugar that the bag takes in cm3. the grains of sugar will have a few air spaces between them so take a rough guess at this amount - maybe 1-2cm3 now minus this from the volume of the bag. divide the volume of the bag by the volume of one grain of sugar. this will be an approximate figure of how many grains there are.
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One kilogram of sugar is equivalent to approximately 2.2 pounds. A standard bag of sugar in the United States is usually 2 pounds (0.9kg), so you would need just over one bag of sugar to match 1kg.
The weight of a 1kg bag of sugar on Earth would be approximately 9.8 Newtons, which is equivalent to the force of gravity acting on the bag.
Say you buy a 1kg bag of sugar for £1 1kg=100g 100g=£1 1g= 1p In short you will be buying sugar 1p per gram.
Say you buy a 1kg bag of sugar for £1 1kg=100g 100g=£1 1g= 1p In short you will be buying sugar 1p per gram.
The number of bags of sweets in 1kg would depend on the weight of each individual bag of sweets. For example, if each bag weighs 100g, then there would be 10 bags in 1kg.
when packed into the measuring cup, 4 1/4 cups in a 1kg bag 8 1/2 in a 2kg bag
A 100% extra free 1KG bag of sugar by johnny071197 add more below.......
a lot. consult the front of your cookbook.