I am not sure what a mike jug is but a 1-gallon jug will hold approx 930 jelly beans.
Approx 4600 of them.
Beans. Very large beans. That would be the kidneys.
There is 1 syllable in 'beans'.
There are 2 syllables in string beans. String has one syllable, and beans has one syllable.
A bushel is 8 gallons and each bushel of produce (based on tomatoes, corn, beets, peppers, and squash) generally weighs 50 pounds. Therefore, each gallon would weigh 6.25 pounds (50 divided by 8). So 5 gallons would weigh approximately 30.25 pounds. This is not precise as it will depend how tightly the beans are packed, but it should be close.
Gallons to quarts:1 US gallon = 4 US quarts 1 US quart = 0.25 US gallonsGallons to liters:1 US gallon is equivalent to 3.785 L. 1 Imperial British gallon is equivalent to 4.546 L.Quarts to liters:1 US quart is equivalent to 0.946 L. 1 Imperial British quart is 1.1365 L.4.
The number of jelly beans in a 1-liter bucket would depend on the size of the jelly beans. Assuming standard jelly beans are about 1-2 cm in size, you could fit roughly 600-700 jelly beans in a 1-liter bucket. This estimation is based on the volume of the jelly beans and the volume of the bucket, taking into account some empty space to allow for movement and settling of the jelly beans.
there are 2,8304 jelly beans in a gallon! we did it.
Generally no longer recommended, however, it the food is placed in jars boiling hot and processed immediately, snap (green) beans, 10# for 35 minutes, lima beans 10# for 60 minutes, baked beans 10# for 75 minutes. Taken from the 1982 Kerr Home Canning & Freezing Guide.
Approx 930 beans.
Oh, dude, that's like asking how many hairs are on your head! I mean, it totally depends on the size of the jelly beans and the bucket. But hey, if you want a ballpark figure, let's say around 500 to 1,000 jelly beans could fill a standard-sized bucket. But hey, who's really counting, right?
I am not sure what a mike jug is but a 1-gallon jug will hold approx 930 jelly beans.
As regards volume measure, there are right at about 37 1/4 quarts in a bushel. Note that this is a "straight conversion" from bushels to quarts. Any processing of the beans will mean "less quarts" in your finished product. Stemmed and cut beans "pack" more tightly than those just picked and tossed into that big basket.
This is because there are more resoruces and factorys in the richer countries to process the cocoa beans.
There are approximately 16 cups of beans in a gallon.
Approximately 8 pounds