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How many oz.'s in a 9 oz. wine glass?
Stupid question right?
Went for dinner at Moxies and I wanted some wine. Looking at he wine menu the per oz. cost is the same for 6 oz., 9 oz. or a bottle. My wife wants a drink, so I order a 9 oz. The glass comes and I look at it say to myself, myself, if this is 9 oz.'s then you could almost fit a whole bottle in this glass. Are restaurants held accountable for their wine pours? Next it will be a bottle and a cab home. lol |
I would not put it past some drunk to measure the volume, and sue if it was just 8 oz.
I have never in my life had a sip of wine and thought, yum, that tastes good. Often I have tasted a beer said yum to myself! I just gave up on wine long ago. Some of my friends have a wine cellar, and a large collection of wine. They ask if I want a glass of wine, and I just politely decline. My wife can have 1/2 a glass of wine and her face looks like she has spent the day in the sun, and she gets a splinting headache. No wine for her. |
What kind of wine was it? Red wines are served in glasses with enough air above the wine for the wine to "breath." The wine typically would not fill more than 1/3 of the glass. Nine ounces of wine would require one heck of a big glass.
White wines don't need to breath so much, so the fill the glass more. |
One of the last PCA dinners I attended had a member complaining that the venue didn’t use proper champagne glasses…
I regret sitting at that table. It was a long week that evening… |
I bring some masking tape with me when I go out. Then I carefully put a tape line to mark where the line in the glass the wine came to. Quickly guzzle the wine and pull out my small can of tomato juice with the matching volume, in this case 9 oz. Pour it in and see if it makes it to the line or not.
Then I pull off the tape and complain that the wine has turned and get a fresh glass. |
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And yes, the correct glass makes a difference. I actually judge restaurants on the quality of their stemware. It's such a simple thing to get right that when they don't it means the attention to detail is lacking throughout and you don't want to see the back of house. |
So it's a 9 oz. glass and not a 9 oz. pour?
It was filled to the widest part of the glass. |
FWIW, standard wine bottle is 750ml or just north of 25 oz so a 9 oz pour is more than 1/3rd the bottle.
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How many 9 oz pours in a 5 liter box?
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Maybe I'm a drunk like Glen said and it was 9 oz. |
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Fun fact, when you think it's empty it's not. Pull the bladder from the box and give it a squeeze, mimimum 6 oz left. |
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You just gotta trust. Your server or bartender is not trying to under pour you. Remember they work on tips and people who feel cheated don't tip well. I find they tend to over pour just a bit. Pardon my acrylic pool cups, they were handy. EDIT: The red wine glasses have a 26 oz capacity, the white 14. http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1686668417.jpg |
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I assume flutes are long and narrow to keep your nose out of the fumes and to shoot the thing back quickly so as not to really taste it. Handy for "commodity" wines but not if it's something special. And "not the proper glass"? That's somewhere on the "precious-insufferable" spectrum. While I have my opinions and preferences - I've had some limited release grower champagnes out of plastic (or, gasp!) styro hotel room cups, sometimes even with Thai or similar takeout food. |
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But the right glass makes a difference. I love the feel of a tall broad waisted thin walled and well balanced wine glasses. |
Is the air above the wine in the glass any different than the air above the glass?
Glen & I would need a few beers to ponder this :D |
The local watering hole actually pours a "glass" of wine, as in they top it off. LOL Good for the weekend lushes. The good bartenders make mixed drinks by free-hand pouring the liquor, then add ice, then whatever mix. If a place measures the pour, or free-hands into a glass of ice while squirting soda, I'll order a beer. I assume y'all have seen the videos where the contents of a 'small' drink cup fill up a 'large' cup? Cannot stand deception.
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I can't even find a regulation for serving sizes... |
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http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1686671167.jpg |
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9 oz.'s goes down way too easy! |
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We don't just taste things with our mouths. Our olfactory senses also contribute to and influence taste. Even colors affect taste. If different color Fruit Loops taste different to you thats your brain doing that. All Fruit Loops regardless of color taste exactly the same. Your brain associates certain colors with certain flavour profiles. |
I believe most of taste comes from smell. Like when you have a cold, food loses most of its taste. I can't imagine what it would be like to have a sense of smell comparable to a dog. It's a whole other world.
So I guess it's more wine smelling than wine tasting... |
I usually have to hold my nose to drink what I'll drink. :D
I had a few sips of Opus One once and I can say it's very very smooth. But not $400 smooth. |
Didn't someone sue a potato ship company complaining the chip didn't fill the full bag or the bag is half empty?
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wine by the glass 6oz $10 9oz $15 bottle $42 If the menu says "9oz for $15" and I feel like I'm getting 6oz, I'd be grumpy. I don't think I've ever been anywhere that did anything other than glass or bottle. I think I've seen some that had "split" (small bottle). Quote:
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I mean given my druthers I like it in proper glassware, but I’d drink it pretty much any way it comes. |
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Now get off my lawn! lol |
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I have never really understood the drinkers that have to hide the taste of the booze with mixers and make a cocktail, or have to freeze the booze to make it palatable. I dated a chick long ago that kept her Tequila in the freezer, and was happy to take shots, and put the tequila back in the freezer.
I don't say it is wrong, I just don't understand it. I like beer. I will pass on IPAs, and German lager is my favorite. A creamy Guinness is always good as well. Carry on, I will pass on all the wine, and leave it to you to drink it. |
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No one who has does it a 2nd time. |
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https://www.forbes.com/sites/tmullen/2016/08/25/why-the-shape-of-a-glass-shapes-the-taste-of-your-wine/?sh=37bf19c76554 |
Back in the daze ... being a beer drinker, I never really drank much wine or the hard stuff .... other than shots of Tequilla .... back then, most of the bar stuff (Cuervo)... I liked chilled .... and wouldn't touch the rot-gut stuff .... and NEVER with "training wheels" .... i.e. salt & lemon :(.
Then Tequilla came into it's own .... the good stuff .... at room temp and a Reposado works for me :). And good Jose C .... the Reserva De La Familia is mighty fine and probably not gonna find it in a bar either .... $$$ :) How many ounces are in a keg? A: None when the party ends :D |
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I've had many different beers. I find some tasty, and some is not tasty to me. I've always found the smell of red wine nice (like coffee). I used to not drink red wine (still don't drink coffee). I was willing to drink white or white zin style wines. The first time that I tried a good cabernet with a really good steak, I was sold. Now I'm happy to drink red wine. Also, there is as much variation in red wine as there is in beer. You can try 5 different cabernets and find that they all have very different flavor profiles and that you like some, but not others. And then there is a wide variation across the various types of red wine, meritage, cabernet, syrah, zinfandel, etc.... And that's before we get into something like port or any dessert style red wines which can be hugely different. But not everyone likes the same stuff, different butt for every seat, and all that. My wife loves dry champagne. She can't stand dry white wine (she's tried, and only found 1 or 2 whites that she could choke down). Also, the temperature of things that we put in our mouths (food and drink) has an impact on how the stuff tastes. That's the whole reason for soft-serve ice cream. It was determined that you get more taste/flavor out of foods that are warmer, so that warmer ice cream is more flavorful than colder ice cream. It makes sense, scent is the most important part of taste, and I suspect most items that make a scent make less scent when they are cold and more when they are warm. So warmer will likely be stronger flavored and colder will likely be less flavored. That might be desirable. It would change the balance between what your taste buds perceive and may even change the balance between multiple chemicals that create multiple scents if some are more volatile at different temperatures than others. Glenn and others, most folks (at least in the US) like their beers cold or maybe ice cold, If that's how you drink your beer, then how is that different from keeping your hard liquor cold? |
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