Smuterella
One Too Many
- Messages
- 1,776
- Location
- London
Puzzicato said:I heard Marie Antoinette.
And if you get my mum drunk enough, she will try to demonstrate that hers fit.
I heard the same.
And do we have the same mother?
Puzzicato said:I heard Marie Antoinette.
And if you get my mum drunk enough, she will try to demonstrate that hers fit.
Tomasso said:Not in France you haven't. Or in any restaurant with properly trained waiters.
Smuterella said:I heard the same.
And do we have the same mother?
Tomasso said:I may be dense but I don't understand...............
At table, the waiter should not touch your glass when pouring.Undertow said:Do the French not pour down the side of the glass? And what training would waiters need?
Tomasso said:At table, the waiter should not touch your glass when pouring.
LordBest said:I loathe champagne flutes, they seem to be getting smaller and less attractive every year. This is in contrast to red wine glasses which are getting larger and increasingly vulgar annually. I fully expect to find one for sale soon the size of a football(soccer).
I would rather use a champagne saucer, but I've not been able to find any I like.
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.
And the reason that a tall narrow flute glass is used by the French, and by Americans now, is that it preserves the bubbles.
^ Brilliant!
I guess now champagne bongs will be all the rage at the frat parties. lol