Answer = 15 x 12 = 180 pounds
There are 30 dozen in a case, and 15 dozen in a box.
12 eggs are in a dozen, times 11 equals 132 eggs.
a dozen = 12 ⇒ 15 dozen = 15 x 12 = 180
The cost of a dozen eggs in 1970 was 62 cents. The cost of a gallon of gas in 1970 was only 36 cents.
Probaly around 15 cents or like 10 cents.
The average cost for one dozen eggs was 69 cents in 1948. That same year, a pound of bacon was 59 cents, a tube of toothpaste was 41 cents, and the price of a movie ticket was $1.20.
15 dozen is 180. So 15 dozen + 1 is 181.
15 dozen = 15 x 12 = 180
5 eggs is 5 eggs.Eggs come in different sizes, in a recipe the average egg expected to be used is large eggs. One dozen large eggs weigh 24 - 27 ounces with 24 ounces being the norm.5 large eggs weigh 10 to 10 1/2 ouncesfor egg size substitutions:petite eggs weigh 15 ounces per dozen (8 = 5 lg. eggs)small eggs weigh 18 ounces per dozen (7 = ~5 lg. eggs)medium eggs weigh 21 ounces per dozen (6 = ~5 lg. eggs)large eggs weigh 24 ounces per dozenextra large eggs weigh 27 ounces per dozen (4 1/2 = ~5 lg. eggs)jumbo eggs weigh 30 ounces per dozen (4 = 5 lg. eggs)**and extra jumbo or double eggs are typically over 33 ounces per dozen (these are often classed grade B eggs and not sold retail, unless part of a liquid or dried egg product. But you can get them from a farm)
US Department of Agriculture standard (minimum weight per dozen) for chicken eggs is as follows:Jumbo -- 30 ounces (oz)Extra large -- 27 ozLarge -- 24 ozMedium -- 21 ozSmall -- 18 ozPeewee -- 15 oz
About eight large eggs. In the US, eggs are sorted according to size grades which are defined by the weight of a dozen eggs. {| ! align="left" | Size or weight class ! align="left" | Minimum net weight per dozen | ---- Jumbo 30 ounces Extra Large 27 ounces Large 24 ounces Medium 21 ounces Small 18 ounces Peewee 15 ounces ---- http://www.ams.usda.gov/howtobuy/eggs.htm |}