BEER GLASS

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Peter1959
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Joined: Wednesday Sep 03, 2008 3:08 pm
Location: Wollongong

BEER GLASS

Post by Peter1959 »

Over the years I have heard numerous ways of washing your favorite beer glass so as to ensure a good head on every pour.

Dont use detergent, dont let the kids drink milk out of it, rinse it only, chill the glass, dont chill the glass??????


What is the general opinion on this please gents???

Peter
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Bizier
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Location: Sydney - Inner West

Re: BEER GLASS

Post by Bizier »

My method is probably not the bees knees, but I have never had problems with head deterioration:

1. Wash glasses before anything else in the kitchen, and with a clean sink.
2. Rinse with hot water
3. Wipe/scrub the glass with a clean wet sponge with a detergent squirt on it, and let soak for a bit to break down grease films
4. Rinse very well in very hot water
5. Drain then dry

I think simple detergent is cool so long as you rinse really well.

I recently saw a publican nearly resort to blows when a staff member went for a glass of cold milk :D
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drsmurto
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Re: BEER GLASS

Post by drsmurto »

Dishwasher with all the normal glasses.

This topic has been done to death and each time i get into an argument over my philosophy.

Dont blame the glass for the lack of head on your beer, blame your brewing regime.

I am the laziest bastard when it comes to looking after my beer glasses yet the head climbs out of the glass every time.

Some people choose to buy fancy glasses with etchings on the bottom, i choose to pay attention to detail when it comes to brewing the beer in the first place.

FWIW - the glasses people use for maximum head are called 'The Headmaster'

More important for megaswill that has a high % of sugar added, not a prob for the all malt brewers!
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Bizier
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Re: BEER GLASS

Post by Bizier »

drsmurto wrote:not a prob for the all malt brewers!
True, I have only ever had problems with too much head, sometimes alarmingly so with high-carbed APAs.
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bensfarm
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Re: BEER GLASS

Post by bensfarm »

dishwasher,if the first is a little flat the second is fine
drtom
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Re: BEER GLASS

Post by drtom »

Bizier wrote:
drsmurto wrote:not a prob for the all malt brewers!
True, I have only ever had problems with too much head, sometimes alarmingly so with high-carbed APAs.
+1
Dost thou think, because thou art virtuous, there shall be no more cakes and ale?
-- The Twelfth Night, William Shakespeare
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drsmurto
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Re: BEER GLASS

Post by drsmurto »

I generally carb to around 1.6-1.8 volumes of CO2 and have no issues with head formation or retention. Mates last night did have a go at me with the beer temp of 10C. Keg fridge has been off for near on 6 weeks now.
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James L
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Re: BEER GLASS

Post by James L »

maybe you could tell them to get their own beer then... i bloody would...

As for cleaning glassware... i put then first in the sink when i do the dishes, and rinse with clean hot water... no dramas...
Image
I freely admit that I was Very Very Drunk....
"They speak of my drinking, but never consider my thirst."
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corks
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Re: BEER GLASS

Post by corks »

wash then rinse well, only ever have problems with megaswills, which aren't really worth putting in a glass in the first place.
svyturys
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Location: Reservoir, Melbourne

Re: BEER GLASS

Post by svyturys »

When I was over in Europe and staying at people's houses I noticed that they only swilled out the glass with cold water. (Everyone had their own glass, which is probably significant)
Head retention was good, day to day. Tried it here and it worked. The only factor upsetting this system is if fatty foods are consumed in the session. Then the glass gets scrubbed with very hot...close to boiling water. No detergents.
Cheers
"In the beginning was the wort..."
svyturys
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Re: BEER GLASS

Post by svyturys »

For anyone that's interested, I just bought some "headmaster" glasses at $3.00 a pop ($17.90 for 6) from the brewmaster shop at Heidelberg.
Trying one now, seems to work really well. Just as well as my "Svyturys" glass brought back from Europe.
I was pricing glasses at the "reject" type of stores for a week or so and their prices of $2.00 to $2.50 for something that certainly didn't measure up to any standard makes the "headmaster" glass quite affordable.
Cheers
Svyturys
OOOOPS...it's "Brewcraft" not "brewmaster"
"In the beginning was the wort..."
Pollux
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Re: BEER GLASS

Post by Pollux »

$3 a pop???

I can buy them for under $2 at the local hospitality store.....
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Bizier
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Re: BEER GLASS

Post by Bizier »

I posted this on AHB already, and neglected this forum, but I found some german crystal beer glasses in 4 styles at Victorias Basement Auburn for $12 a box - making them $1-2 each!

I can say that the 2 kinds I got are a pleasure to drink from.

http://www.aussiehomebrewer.com/forum/i ... =26303&hl=
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