Fat Bastard
Brew Cvlt Doom
- Joined
- 11/8/11
- Messages
- 914
- Reaction score
- 226
I have an assortment of glasses here. Lots of old schooners and nonic pint glasses nicked from pubs when I was less fat, but just as *******ly, and some promo tulips, half litre steins and others.
In the last year or two, I've treated myself to some stemmed Reidel and Spiegelau stemmed glasses and for consistency I normally sample my brews and 'serious' beers with the Spiegelau tulips. I've found that both these excellent quality glasses give ********* head retention, presumably because the glass is so perfect there are no nucleation points for bubbles to form and the beer looks flat and has little or no head unless an exceptionally aggressive pour is used. They hold lacing just fine, but I've found when pouring my beer into "foreign" glasses they seem overcarbed, and the feedback from the NSW and Castle Hill comps has confirmed this.
I poured some of my blonde ale into a ****** 20 year old pub schooner (not the etched bottom kind) and it had fantastic head retention, if not a bit too much head retention given that it looked like an ice-cream sticking over the rim of the glass, and it lasted all the way to the bottom. In the Spigelau, it develops a head that fades super quickly to a couple of millimetres of foam on top of the beer. All glasses used for beer and wine here git a run in the dishwasher, then a rinse in dilute vinegar and plain hot water and dried with a cloth specifically kept for glass drying.
Is buying fancy glasses a waste of money?
In the last year or two, I've treated myself to some stemmed Reidel and Spiegelau stemmed glasses and for consistency I normally sample my brews and 'serious' beers with the Spiegelau tulips. I've found that both these excellent quality glasses give ********* head retention, presumably because the glass is so perfect there are no nucleation points for bubbles to form and the beer looks flat and has little or no head unless an exceptionally aggressive pour is used. They hold lacing just fine, but I've found when pouring my beer into "foreign" glasses they seem overcarbed, and the feedback from the NSW and Castle Hill comps has confirmed this.
I poured some of my blonde ale into a ****** 20 year old pub schooner (not the etched bottom kind) and it had fantastic head retention, if not a bit too much head retention given that it looked like an ice-cream sticking over the rim of the glass, and it lasted all the way to the bottom. In the Spigelau, it develops a head that fades super quickly to a couple of millimetres of foam on top of the beer. All glasses used for beer and wine here git a run in the dishwasher, then a rinse in dilute vinegar and plain hot water and dried with a cloth specifically kept for glass drying.
Is buying fancy glasses a waste of money?