One Pound of Cheese to Ml Conversion

Questions: How many milliliters of cheese in One pound? How much is One pound of cheese in ml?

The answer is: one pound of cheese is equivalent to 477 milliliters(*)

'Weight' to Volume Converter

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weight ?Enter the amount of the mass measurement (weight). The calculator accepts fractional values such as: 1/2 (half), 1/3 (1 third), etc.
unit ? Choose the unit of mass (Kilogram, milligram, ounce, etc.)
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ingredient?Choose an ingredient, or the substance, by typing its name in the box on the left.
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Results

One pound of cheese equals 477 milliliters.
(*) To be more precise, one pound of cheese is equal to 476.96 milliliters. All figures are approximate.

Pounds of cheese to milliliters Chart

Pounds of cheese to milliliters
0.1 pound of cheese = 47.7 milliliters
1/5 pound of cheese = 95.4 milliliters
0.3 pound of cheese = 143 milliliters
0.4 pound of cheese = 191 milliliters
1/2 pound of cheese = 238 milliliters
0.6 pound of cheese = 286 milliliters
0.7 pound of cheese = 334 milliliters
0.8 pound of cheese = 382 milliliters
0.9 pound of cheese = 429 milliliters
1 pound of cheese = 477 milliliters
Pounds of cheese to milliliters
1 pound of cheese = 477 milliliters
1.1 pound of cheese = 525 milliliters
1/5 pound of cheese = 572 milliliters
1.3 pound of cheese = 620 milliliters
1.4 pound of cheese = 668 milliliters
1/2 pound of cheese = 715 milliliters
1.6 pound of cheese = 763 milliliters
1.7 pound of cheese = 811 milliliters
1.8 pound of cheese = 859 milliliters
1.9 pound of cheese = 906 milliliters

Note: some values may be rounded.

FAQs on cheese volume to weight conversion

One pound of cheese equals how many milliliters?

One pound of cheese is equivalent 477 milliliters.

How much is 477 milliliters of cheese in pounds?

477 milliliters of cheese equals one ( ~ 1) pound.

Notes on ingredient measurements

It is a bit tricky to get an accurate food conversion since its characteristics change according to humidity, temperature, or how well packed the ingredient is. Ingredients that contain the terms sliced, minced, diced, crushed, chopped add uncertainties to the measurements. A good practice is to measure ingredients by weight, not by volume so that the error is decreased.

Disclaimer

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