tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6760958785336796611.post7756610306011450594..comments2024-01-17T03:50:26.727-05:00Comments on Beer in Baltimore: How Bars REALLY Pour Your Beer--Short, in many cases!Alexander D. Mitchell IVhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16063927891723178579noreply@blogger.comBlogger3125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6760958785336796611.post-11729889783976574112010-06-24T08:22:02.430-04:002010-06-24T08:22:02.430-04:00It's sadly not true that all UK landlords &...It's sadly not true that all UK landlords & bar staff are fastidious about serving us a full pint, but bizarrely it is the right in law to be served at least a 95% full pint!<br /><br />The trouble is with many pubs using brim-full glasses - if the beer is served with any head at all, it means you're not served the full measure (in UK this is 20 Fl Oz / 568ml). <br /><br />The option to ask for a top-up is given as a solution to this problem, but a simpler one to me is simply stocking slightly over-sized 'pint-to-line' glasses, so bar-staff & drinker can clearly see if it's right or not.<br /><br />http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1239599/Nine-pints-sold-short-trading-standards-officers-discover.html<br /><br />(apologies that this is taken from an awful bigoted UK newspaper, but it's recent & the gist is right - British Trading Standards Officers say 9 out of ten UK pints are not quite pints)<br />Cheers<br />Mike McG<br />Brewer, nr Liverpool, UK.MicMachttps://www.blogger.com/profile/08464263001561643944noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6760958785336796611.post-87815726546378472792010-06-16T16:15:35.623-04:002010-06-16T16:15:35.623-04:00I've gone back and forth on this Alex, but hav...I've gone back and forth on this Alex, but have ultimately decided this is not a battle I wish to fight. At one time it seems as if the word "pint" was ubiquitous for a glass of beer. Unless specified otherwise, I always just assumed that's what I was getting. Obviously, no longer...<br /><br />My feeling is that this is just something customers need to keep in mind when they visit their friendly tavern. After all, beer glasses now come in so many shapes and sizes, you pretty much have to figure out for yourself what you're actually paying for that glass of Jever Pilsner or that glass of Chimay white. <br /><br />As if that isn't bad enough, many servers have become master of the underpour. Unlike in the UK where servers work fastidiously to make sure your beer is poured as close to the top of the glass as they can get it, pours in the US are all over the map. A lot of times the server is just in a hurry, is sloppy, etc., but I've noticed some bartenders that routinely short customers a good inch of liquid from the top. It all adds the bottom line of course, and when I see something like that on a regular basis, it's hard to believe after a while that it's happening by accident.<br /><br />Just my opinion, but ultimately I think the responsibilty is on us as customers to make sure we aren't getting cheated. If a bar is routinely underpouring beer, or is routinely cheating me on the price, there's an easy solution... go elsewhere. If enough people do that after a while, the tavern in question will get the hint.JohnM.https://www.blogger.com/profile/08630863956282168060noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6760958785336796611.post-25340807276298691212010-06-15T15:22:50.838-04:002010-06-15T15:22:50.838-04:00Did you just happen to have your measuring beaker ...Did you just happen to have your measuring beaker on you, or should we assume you had reason to believe that the bar was especially thrifty?Andrewhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17715718530312100376noreply@blogger.com