Geesie said:Treat it like beer? Should I drink it by the pint?
Not in France you haven't. Or in any restaurant with properly trained waiters.Yeps said:I have always seen it poured down the side of the glass.
Tomasso said:Not in France you haven't. Or in any restaurant with properly trained waiters.
From an empty mayonaisse jar. Those ridiculous flutes and "saucers" don't hold enough- you have to keep getting up and pouring a fresh one.LocktownDog said:Yes. Yes you should.
Tomasso said:Not in France you haven't. Or in any restaurant with properly trained waiters.
Mav said:From an empty mayonaisse jar. Those ridiculous flutes and "saucers" don't hold enough- you have to keep getting up and pouring a fresh one.
I tried drinking champagne right out of the bottle once on a small commuter plane between Kalispel and Spokane during an extremely bumpy flight in a blizzard. Under those conditions, the carbonation is a hazard- I ruined my favorite tie. And the other three passengers, as well as the flight attendant, laughed at me.HepKitty said:LOL I was going to say drink straight out of the bottle, like beer, but you win!
I may be dense but I don't understand...............Geesie said:Now that's what I call irony!
dhermann1 said:I was once told by a friend who knew about this sort of thing that the reason you see Champagne drunk from those wide topped glasses in old movies is that that's how the British upper crust used to drink it. And the reason for that was that they DIDN'T like the bubbles. The wide top makes the bubbles fizz away quicker, leaving a flatter drink.
Maybe this was so those old upper class sots could gulp the stuff down quicker without having a fizz bomb go off in their noses.
Or they didn' get their big, aristocratic conks stuck in the top of the glass!
I like a bowl glass, makes for better guzzling as you said and also you don't get a mouthful of glass everytime you have a sip, or less of a mouthful of glass anyway IMO!
dhermann1 said:And the reason that a tall narrow flute glass is used by the French, and by Americans now, is that it preserves the bubbles.
Yeps said:This is news? I have always seen it poured down the side of the glass.
Smuterella said:Ahem, and the Brits now.
I'm not keen on flutes, not because of the bubbles but because they are so damned narrow, they do hit you on the nose. Not that my nose is big or aristocratic in any way.
Also, they look a tad common I think, they remind me of weddings and Ladies Day at Ascot. I like a coupe much better, especially as the design was supposedly inspired by the shape of a perfect breast.
Miss sofia said:And the Brits again..
I believe it was Isadora Duncan's breast, (don't quote me, but i believe it was) which is as good a reason as any to want to drink out of one, rather than a flute. I have some lovely, thin, deco glasses which are much more glamourous to drink out of, you get minimum glass in your mouth, and i agree with Smuterella flutes are a tad common.
Puzzicato said:I heard Marie Antoinette.
And if you get my mum drunk enough, she will try to demonstrate that hers fit.
Ada Vice said:
I prefer a flute, if you drink it the way your meant to you won't hit your nose, tip your head back and let it pour it down your throat. lol