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What is the best size for a pint? 16 years 9 months ago #1

They are talking about making chocolate bars smaller so people will eat less chocolate[/url:1oz0t441].

[quote:1oz0t441]Cans of fizzy drinks, currently 330ml, should be sold in a significantly smaller size of 250ml. [/quote:1oz0t441]
also cans of fizzy will be reduced in size[/url:1oz0t441].

Will they make a pint smaller? Should they? What is the right size for a beer? Climate and beer strength probably need to be considered.

[quote:1oz0t441]'Never[/url:1oz0t441] heard of 'em,' said the barman shortly. 'Litre and half litres - that's all we serve. There's the glasses on the shelf in front of you.'

'I likes a pint,' persisted the old man. 'You could 'a drawed me off a pint easy enough. We didn't 'ave these bleeding litres when I was a young man.'[/quote:1oz0t441]

16 years 9 months ago #2

I think that depends on the beer.

For weaker beers, like ordinary bitter or mild, a pint (or 500ml) glass is the obvious choice.

You could make a case for 330ml or 400ml glasses for the 4.X% strength beer most commonly sold in Ireland, but I think pint (or 500ml) glasses are fine. Once you start climbing much over 5% I think you are heading into strong beer territory though and should consider changing to smaller glasses.

For strong beers, 250ml to 330ml (with 1/2 pint sitting somewhere in the middle) stemmed glasses are the way to go, in my opinion. They remind you that you are drinking a strong beer every time you pick them up.

16 years 9 months ago #3

If you reduced the pint the same ratio as the cans then it would be 426ml. Could there be a 400ml beer in all our futures?
Would people actually drink any less? Reducing the volume in pubs reduces drinking, but there are already laws for that.

16 years 9 months ago #4

I think different size glasses for different strength beers is a good idea, but I don't know if people would actually drink less of their regular tipple just because the glass is smaller. 7 pints would just become ten 400ml glasses.

"a_friend_in_mead":34hvxigx wrote: Reducing the volume in pubs reduces drinking, but there are already laws for that.[/quote:34hvxigx]
Not sure what you mean by that.

16 years 9 months ago #5

Oh sorry. There is a link between the loudness of music and how much people drink[/url:2dgo8btz]. I cannot find the proper link at the moment. Workplace noise limits are about a pub full of people talking. Which means if there is music blaring over that you are above the safety limit. Not that this limit is enforced.

16 years 9 months ago #6

Gotcha. I've been saying that for years, but now I have evidence to back up my rantings. Gift!
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