Beer glassware
Beer glassware
For more 16 oz beer mugs wholesaleinformation, please contact us. We will provide professional answers.
Beer glassware (from left to right): Pilstulpe, tasting glass, snifter, Willibecher
Beer glassware comprise vessels made of glass, designed or commonly used for serving and drinking beer. Styles of glassware vary in accord with national or regional traditions; legal or customary requirements regarding serving measures and fill lines; such practicalities as breakage avoidance in washing, stacking or storage; commercial promotion by breweries; artistic or cultural expression in folk art or as novelty items or usage in drinking games; or to complement, to enhance, or to otherwise affect a particular type of beer's temperature, appearance and aroma, as in the case of its head. Drinking vessels intended for beer are made from a variety of materials other than glass, including pottery, pewter, and wood.
International styles
[
edit
]
Pilsner glass
[
edit
]
A pilsner glass is used for many types of light beers, including pale lager or pilsner. Pilsner glasses are generally smaller than a pint glass, usually in 200 millilitres (7.0 imperial fluid ounces), 250 ml (8.8 imp fl oz), 300 ml (11 imp fl oz), 330 ml (12 imp fl oz) or 400 ml (14 imp fl oz) sizes. In Europe, 500 ml (18 imp fl oz) glasses are also common. They are tall, slender and tapered. The slender glass reveals the colour, and carbonation of the beer,[1] and the broad top helps maintain a beer head.[2]
Weizen glasses are sometimes mistakenly called pilsner glasses because they are somewhat similar in appearance, but true pilsner glasses have an even taper without any amount of curvature.[3]
Pint glass
[
edit
]
The definition of a pint differs by country, thus a pint glass will reflect the regular measure of beer in that country. In the UK, law stipulates that a serving of beer be fixed at the imperial pint (568 ml ' 1.2 US pints). Half-pint glasses of 10 imp fl oz (284 ml) are generally smaller versions of pint glasses. Quarter-pint glasses of 5 imp fl oz (142 ml) also exist, and are popular in Australia (now 140 ml from metrication), where they are known as a "pony". These may simply be smaller pint glasses, or may be a special pony glass. In the US, a pint is 16 US fl oz (473 ml), but the volume is not strictly regulated and glasses may vary somewhat. Glasses of 500 ml are usually called pints in American parlance.
The common shapes of pint glass are:
- Conical glasses are shaped, as the name suggests, as an inverted truncated cone around 6 inches (15 cm) tall and tapering by about 1 inch (25 mm) in diameter over its height.
- The nonic, a variation on the conical design, where the glass bulges out a couple of inches from the top; this is partly to improve the grip, partly to prevent the glasses from sticking together when stacked, and partly to give strength and stop the rim from becoming chipped or "nicked".[4] The term "nonic" derives from "no nick".
- Jug glasses, or "dimple mugs", are shaped more like a large mug with a handle. They are moulded with a grid pattern of thickened glass on the outside, somewhat resembling the segmentation of a WWII-era hand grenade. The dimples prevent the glass slipping out of the fingers in a washing-up bowl, and the design of the glass emphasises strength, also to withstand frequent manual washing. These design features became less important when manual washing was superseded by machine washing from the s onwards. Dimpled glasses are now rarer than the other types and are regarded as more traditional.[5] This sort of glass is also known as a "Handle" due to the handle on the glass. They are popular with the older generation and people with restricted movement in their hands which can make holding a usual pint glass difficult. They have recently started to make a renaissance, especially in northern Britain.[6]
-
British dimpled glass pint mug
-
"Conical" pint glass
-
"Nonic" pint glass
-
Current Guinness glass
Connoisseur's glassware
[
edit
]
Beer connoisseurs sometimes invest in special, non-traditional glassware to enhance their appreciation. An example was the range marketed by Michael "Beer Hunter" Jackson.
Snifters
[
edit
]
A snifterTypically used for serving brandy and cognac, a snifter is ideal for capturing the volatiles of aromatic beers such as Double/Imperial IPAs, Belgian ales, barley wines and wheat wines. The shape helps trap the volatiles, while allowing swirling to agitate them and produce an intense aroma.
Taster glasses
[
edit
]
Glasses holding 1/3 of a pint or less may be used to:
- Try a beer in a pub or café before purchasing a full measure
- Split a bottle of rare or strong beer between friends
- Sample multiple beers without becoming inebriated. For instance a brewpub might provide a sampler of three different brews in
1
'3
pint measures; or a beer festival might provide small capacity glasses for patrons.
Plastic
[
edit
]
Plastic beer vessels are usually shaped in imitation of whichever glasses are usual in the locality. They are mainly used as a substitute for glass vessels where breakages would be particularly problematic or likely, for instance at outdoor events.
German, Austrian, and Swiss styles
[
edit
]
Weizen
glasses[
edit
]
A weizen glass with a fill lineA weizen glass is used to serve wheat beer.[7] Originating in Germany, the glass is narrow at the bottom and slightly wider at the top; the width both releasing aroma, and providing room for the often thick, fluffy heads produced by wheat beer.[8] It tends to be taller than a pint glass, and generally holds 500 ml (7'8 imp pt) with room for foam or "head". In some countries, such as Belgium, the glass may be 250 ml (1'2 imp pt) or 330 ml (5'8 imp pt).[citation needed]
Wheat beers tend to foam a lot, especially if poured quickly. In pubs, if the bottle is handed to the patron for self pouring, it is customary for the glass to be taken to the patron wet or with a bit of water in the bottom to be swirled around to wet the entire glass to keep the beer from foaming excessively.[citation needed]
Beer stein
[
edit
]
Beer stein or simply "stein" ( STYNE) has been for over a century an English expression for a traditional German beer mug made out of stoneware, whether simple and serviceably sturdy, or elaborately ornamental with either a traditionally cultural theme, or so embellished as to be sold as a souvenir or a collectible. The former may be made out of stoneware, but rarely the inferior earthenware or wood, while the latter is usually of glazed pottery, but often porcelain or pewter, or even silver or crystal. It may have either an uncovered mouth or a hinged pewter lid with a thumb-lever. The capacity of a German "stein" indicated by its fill line on its side ranged from "0.4l" (4 deci-litre), through "0.5l" (half a litre) or a full litre (or comparable historic sizes). Like decorative tankards, steins are often decorated in a culturally nostalgic, often German or Bavarian, theme. Some believe the lid that excludes flies from the beer today was originally intended for those so diseased in the age of the Black Plague.[9]
Maßkrug
[
edit
]
A Maßkrug can be made with stoneware or glass.The Maß ([ˈmas]) is a one-litre (1.8-imperial-pint; 34-US-fluid-ounce) quantity of beer, most commonly used in Bavaria and Austria.[10] It is served in a Maßkrug (pl. Maßkrüge), which is sometimes simply referred to as a Maß. As a feminine noun, it is die Maß, though commonly confused with the grammatically neuter noun das Maß, meaning "measure". The unit of volume is typically used only for measuring beer sold for immediate on-site consumption. Because the Maß is a unit of measure, it can come in the form of a glass or stoneware mug.
The endurance sport of Maßkrugstemmen involves holding a filled, 2.4-kilogram (5.3 lb) Maß at arm's length.[11] The world record is 45 minutes and 2 seconds.[12]
Stangen
[
edit
]
Dunkel beer in aStange
The high, narrow and cylindrical Stange (German for "stick" or "rod", plural Stangen) is traditionally used for Kölsch. A Becher, traditionally used for Altbier, is similar, though slightly shorter and fatter. The Stange usually holds between 100 and 200 ml (1'8 and 3'8 imp pt), though larger ones are now sometimes used to reduce serving work. Stangen are carried by slotting them into holes in a special tray called a Kranz ("wreath").[citation needed]
Willibecher
[
edit
]
Standard WillibecherThe Willibecher or Willybecher[13] ("Willi glass") is common in Germany. Its invention in is commonly attributed to an employee of Ruhrglas GmbH named Willy Steinmeier.[14] It is characterized by its shape: conical to the top portion where it curves inward to converge back to the top of a smaller diameter opening. The Willibecher is produced in sizes of 200, 250, 300, 400, and 500 ml (0.35, 0.44, 0.53, 0.70, and 0.88 imp pt; 6.8, 8.5, 10.1, 13.5, and 16.9 US fl oz).
Beer boot
[
edit
]
German "Beer boot"Boot- and shoe-shaped drinking vessels have been found at archaeological sites dating back to the bronze-age Urnfield cultures. Modern beer boots (German: Bierstiefel) have over a century of history and culture behind them. It is commonly believed that a general somewhere promised his troops to drink beer from his boot if they were successful in battle. When the troops prevailed, the general had a glassmaker fashion a boot from glass to fulfill his promise without tasting his own feet and to avoid spoiling the beer in his leather boot. Since then, soldiers have enjoyed toasting to their victories with a beer boot. At gatherings in Germany, Austria and Switzerland, beer boots are often passed among the guests for a festive drinking challenge. Since the movie Beerfest premiered in , beer boots have become increasingly popular in the United States.[15]
It is an old joke to hand the boot to a young novice drinker with the toe pointing away from his person, which will result in beer pouring over the drinker's face uncontrollably when air enters the toe; seasoned drinkers always point the toe towards their body until the glass is sufficiently drained.[citation needed]
Pilstulpe
[
edit
]
Traditional German PilstulpenThe Pilstulpe ("Pilsner Tulip") or Biertulpe ("Beer tulip") is the traditional glass used for German pilsner beers. Sizes are typically around 300 millilitres (11 imp fl oz; 10 US fl oz), but can be as large as 500 millilitres (18 imp fl oz; 17 US fl oz). When used in restaurant settings, a small piece of absorbent paper is placed around the base to absorb any drips from spilling or condensation.
Gallery
[
edit
]
-
Elaborate earthenware beer steins
-
Common half-litre Humpen or beer mug
- Warsteiner glass
-
A Maßkrug
Belgian and Dutch styles
[
edit
]
Stronger or bottled beers are frequently served in specially-made, elaborately-branded glassware. In addition to the profusion of glasses provided by brewers, some Belgian beer cafés serve beer in their own "house" glassware.[importance?]
Additional reading:How Long Does It Take for CPLA Cutlery to Decompose?
Is Compostable CPLA Cutlery Microwave-Safe?
Different Types of Water Faucets Used in Home Plumbing
What is silk screen printing on glass?
The Benefits of Investing in a High-Quality Baby Stroller
Which Stroller Is Best for Your Baby?
How to Choose the Right Plant Hanging Flower Pot?
Are you interested in learning more about 32 oz beer mugs wholesale? Contact us today to secure an expert consultation!
Flute glass
[
edit
]
A vessel similar to a champagne flute is the preferred serving vessel for Belgian lambics and fruit beers. The narrow shape helps maintain carbonation, while providing a strong aromatic front. Flute glasses display the lively carbonation, sparkling color, and soft lacing of this distinct style.
Goblet or Chalice
[
edit
]
Chalices and goblets are large, stemmed, bowl-shaped glasses adequate for serving heavy Belgian ales, German bocks, and other big sipping beers. The distinction between goblet and chalice is typically in the glass thickness. Goblets tend to be thick, while the chalice is thin walled. Some chalices are even etched on the bottom to nucleate a stream of bubbles for maintaining a nice head.
Tulip glass
[
edit
]
A tulip glass has a shape similar to a brandy snifter. The body is bulbous, like a snifter, but the top flares out to form a lip which helps head retention. It is recommended for serving Scottish ales, American double/imperial IPAs, barley wines, Belgian ales and other aromatic beers. Some pint glasses that taper outwards towards the top are also called tulip glasses, despite having noticeably less curvature.
Gallery
[
edit
]
British and Irish styles
[
edit
]
Tankard
[
edit
]
A tankard is a form of drinkware consisting of a large, roughly cylindrical, drinking cup with a single handle. Tankards are usually made of silver, pewter, or glass, but can be made of other materials, for example wood, ceramic or leather.[16] A tankard may have a hinged lid, and tankards featuring glass bottoms are also fairly common. Tankards are shaped and used similarly to beer steins. Metal tankards were popular in 18th and early 19th century Britain and Ireland, but were largely superseded by glass vessels. They are now seen as collector's items, or may be engraved and presented as a gift. Wooden and leather tankards were popular before the 17th century, but being made of organic materials have rarely survived intact to the present day.
-
Reconstructed 16 AD wooden tankard
- Pewter tankard
-
Glass tankard
Yard of ale
[
edit
]
A yard of aleA yard of ale or yard glass is a very tall glass used for drinking around 2.5 imperial pints (1,400 ml) of beer, depending upon the diameter. The glass is approximately 1 yard (90 cm) long, shaped with a bulb at the bottom, and a widening shaft which constitutes most of the height.[17]
The glass most likely originated in 17th-century England where the glass was known also as a "Long Glass", a "Cambridge Yard (Glass)" and an "Ell Glass". It is associated by legend with stagecoach drivers, though was mainly used for drinking feats and special toasts.[18][19] (Compare with the Pauwel Kwak glass).
Drinking a yard glass full of beer is a traditional pub game. The fastest drinking of a yard of ale in the Guinness Book of Records is 5 seconds.[20]
Capacity
[
edit
]
Volume France Belgium Netherlands Germany Austria Switzerland Czech Italy Spain UK Ireland Australia Quebec 125 ml Galopin,Bock
Benjamin Birrino Zurito (Basque) 200 ml Flûte,Hollandais
Fluitje,Buisje, Pijpje
Stange (Cologne, but only for Kölsch) Galopin (French)Herrgöttli (German)
Birra Piccola Caña 250 ml Demi,Bock
Boerke,Chope, Pintje
Vaasje,Emmertje, Rendsje, Amsterdammertje (though not in Amsterdam) Rotterdammertje (only in Rotterdam)
Botellín 284 ml Middy,Ten, Half
Middy,Ten, Half, Glass
285 ml Middy,Pot, Handle, Half
300 ml Seidl,Seitel,
Seiterl
Jonker Becher,Stange, Rugeli
330 ml Gourde,Klepke
Canette Třetinka Tercio,Mediana
400 ml Birra Media 425 ml Schooner 500 ml Distingué, Baron, Mini-chevalier,Chope, Pinte, Sérieux
Demi Pul Seidel,Seidla, Halbe (Southern Germany)
Krügel,Krügerl, Halbe
Chope (French)Grosses (German)
Půllitr Pinta 568 ml Pint Pint Chopine 570 ml Pint 775/950 ml Humpen Holba Beer stein ml Chevalier,Parfait, Double Pinte, Formidable
Corbeau,Lunette, Litron
Maß Masse/Litron (French)Mass (German)
Tuplák Birra grande Pinte ml Quart Quart ml Jug ml Stiefel,Liesl
Australian measures
[
edit
]
Prior to metrication in Australia, one could buy beer in glasses of size 4, 5, 6, 7, 10, 15 or 20 imperial fluid ounces. Each sized glass had a different name in each Australian state. These were replaced by glasses of size 115, 140, 170, 200, 285, 425 and 570 ml. Progressively, the differences are decreasing. In the 21st century, most pubs no longer have a glass smaller than 200 ml (7 imp fl oz); typically available are 200ml, 285ml and 425ml, and increasingly many pubs also have pints 570 millilitres (20.1 imp fl oz) available.
See also
[
edit
]
References
[
edit
]
- Beer glasses at Wikimedia Commons
The History of the World's Most Iconic Beer Glass, Bierstiefel
Updated on April 17,
Munich. September 25, . I made my way from my forest campsite on the fringes of Munich to the campgrounds in the heart of the city, completing the final step of my pilgrimage to the 200th anniversary of Oktoberfest. As a twenty-year-old Germanophile (unable to drink in my home country) and a lover of German-style beer, this was my dream.
Weaving through mobs of lederhosen-clad lads and ladies, I made my way into one of the bierhalls: Hofbräu, if memory serves (it was fuzzy the next day, let alone years later). I ordered my first beer, a one-liter monster. A moment later, a burly bier maiden'carrying no less than eight of these ginormous steins'pirouetted through the crowd, slammed a glass down in front of me, took payment, and, with shocking grace, vanished again into the crowd. I took my first slog of many to come: 'Ahhhh, now that's a beer.'
I was in heaven. But as I took it all in, there was one thing missing: Where were the iconic German bierstiefel (beer boots) I had come to know and love? The ones from such historically accurate and culturally relevant investigations of German culture as 'Beerfest' and Around the World frat parties? Where were the cheers of 'Das Boot! Das Boot!?'
So I wondered: Is the boot an authentic element of Germany's drinking heritage or a poetic interpretation to popularize the depiction for an American audience more obsessed with cultural clichés than cultural histories?
I returned to my beer and promptly forgot all about the shape of the glass I drank. But with another Oktoberfest'which drew approximately 7.2 million visitors'I remained curious: Where did the notion of the bierstiefel come from?
The Origin Stories of the German Beer Boot
There are several divergent origin stories for the bierstiefel, but the two most common oral histories trace their roots back to the battlefield.
One states that, to motivate his troops during a particularly trying day on the battlefield, a German general wagered to drink out of his boot should his forces win (a tradition rugby players are all too familiar with).
Needless to say, the unit won. But there, the history already begins to split, with some recollections saying the German general completed the wager and thus inspired the glassware and others claiming he had a glass boot fashioned to keep his word and avoid a nasty pour.
The other dominant story proposes that some German divisions'or even some more antiquated militaries'would haze soldiers, as a rite of passage, by having them drink from their marched-in boots.
I can't say for sure if any of these ring true, but as a student of history, I like to look for evidence. And as it turns out, the hard evidence we have paints a somewhat different story'though one that wouldn't necessarily contradict a story arc that begins with drinking from an actual boot.
Actually, We Can Thank the English for the Beer Boot
The earliest physical evidence of a glass beer boot actually comes from England (sorry, Germany) sometime during the early nineteenth century.
These were a slightly different style from what we think of today'much smaller and featured a riding strap blown onto the glass around the ankle of the boot, nodding to their association with riding and hunting clubs.
However, the beer boot did not last as a feature of English culture, losing favor about a half-century later.
It is unclear if the British inspired the Germans, but in the mid-s, the bierstiefel we know today became prominent.
The Germans upped the size (to one-liter-plus) and ditched the riding strap. By machine-pressing the glass, they could also scale up production and make the boot a part of popular culture rather than a limited, specialty item.
The military origin resurfaces with WWI, where German generals indeed wagered drinking from a bierstiefel post-battle. As a result, the boot size only grew larger. By this time, 'Das Boot' was a part of German military culture, and by WWII, American soldiers were collecting and repatriating them as war bounty. And so the bierstiefel started its globalization, temporarily peaking in the s with Japanese ceramic counterparts and American cowboy boot spinoffs.
The Beer Boot Becomes a Pop Icon
But much as Western movies went out of fashion in the early s, so did the cowboy beer boot and the globalization of the shoe-shaped drinking glass with it.
As the fad faded, the bierstiefel remained popular chiefly in Germany and among collectors abroad. And so it remained for nearly fifty years until the film 'Beerfest' reintroduced the beer boot, creating an image of Germans as boot-guzzling beer maniacs.
The movie kicked off the re-popularization of the bierstiefel, delivering to the world a new form of competitive drinking and, in truth, promoting drinking in a decidedly un-German manner.
There's no doubt that speed drinking from a boot can be fun, but it doesn't fit with a culture that loves and appreciates beer enough to host a two-week festival honoring the joys of producing and drinking beer.
As I think back on my time in Munich, it's no surprise I quickly forgot the absence of the boot: Oktoberfest already has a wealth of traditions all its own.
Contact us to discuss your requirements of 25 oz beer mugs wholesale. Our experienced sales team can help you identify the options that best suit your needs.
FRUIT RIPENING COLD ROOMS
How To Choose Bamboo Leaves For Sushi
Understanding SGP in Laminated Glass: Unveiling Superior Structural Integrity
Unveiling the Versatility of Metal Baskets
Unlocking the Mechanics of Extendable Poles: A Comprehensive Guide
What type of walker is best for babies?
Understanding Plate Glass: Unveiling Its Characteristics and Applications