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He's got a point you know!

(52 Posts)
Anne58 Mon 01-Jun-15 23:51:30

Some chap who wrote a letter to the Daily Telegraph (I keep writing, not a sausage has made it into print yet!)

He said something along the lines of: Champagne flutes, once you have taken the first sip, the only way to get at the rest involves tipping your head back and risking a crunch of the neck vertebrae. He goes on to recommend the "champagne saucer" type glass.

Not sure about those, possibly risk losing the fizz/mousse/bubble effect?

Mind you, if, as legend tells it, they were modeled on the bosom/breast of Marie Antoinette, there's hope for me yet! grin

kittylester Tue 02-Jun-15 11:41:21

Actually, one can spin it out by only drinking Bellinis! wine

Is it too early yet? I expect it's 5 o'clock somewhere!

kittylester Tue 02-Jun-15 11:39:51

A teaspoon makes it last long enough for my needs Galen. grin

loopylou Tue 02-Jun-15 11:32:44

I don't like champagne sad I'm afraid! Even the most expensive straight to my head and gives me a headache........

BTW, what's a boucheron?

day to day basis * harrigran* shock

Greyduster Tue 02-Jun-15 11:20:06

Champagne from good crystal flutes! Mmm! Delightful! If you can't get at the last bit, lie on the floor and get someone to pour it down your throat. If you drink enough of it, you end up there anywaysmile! (speak for yourself Greyduster!)

harrigran Tue 02-Jun-15 11:16:25

On a day to day basis we drink our champagne from white wine glasses, the flutes only come out for celebrations so they look the part in photos.

downtoearth Tue 02-Jun-15 09:54:29

a friend knowing I like a glass or 3 of wine has bought me an ingenious present for my birthday it consists of 75cl bottle but the neck opens into a wine glass the caption reads "finally a wine glass that fits my needs"...I can now truthfully answer when asked...but I have had only one while cooking....grin maybe somewhere one exists with a flute for champagne.[.sunshine]wine

Galen Tue 02-Jun-15 09:53:51

Teaspoon doesn't really work. A boucheron does!

whitewave Tue 02-Jun-15 09:51:24

I inherited some old fashioned champagne glasses from an aunt - only ever used them for a desert cant remember what it was though

kittylester Tue 02-Jun-15 09:50:03

Did you know that a teaspoon in the top of the bottle keeps champagne/prosecco/cava bubbly? If you ever need to keep it, of course! wine

NfkDumpling Tue 02-Jun-15 09:46:01

One of those silly things the upper, upper class used to do I believe. Champagne in a lady's shoe drunk by a bloke. Never fancied the idea. The champagne would taste foul and the shoe would end up all sticky.

Galen Tue 02-Jun-15 09:44:47

I'll drink champagne out of anything. I have a boucheron ? Spelling to keep it if I don't drink the whole bottle, ( not often used)
I have saucer glasses,flutes and bloody big half pint flutes ( wedding present)
Always wished I could prescribe champagne instead of antidepressants, it works quicker and tastes much nicer.

downtoearth Tue 02-Jun-15 09:40:52

is it true champagne has been supped from a shoe grin

NfkDumpling Tue 02-Jun-15 09:30:48

Love champagne. Hate those flutes. Have a big nose. Have thought about secreting one of those little straws that come stuck to apply juice boxes up my sleeve and using that.

Annsixty Champagne, even the pretend stuff, is the greatest pick-me-up. Can be drunk any time. And the best thing is that the whole bottle has to be drunk. Doesn't keep!

annsixty Tue 02-Jun-15 09:20:09

If I had something to celebrate I wouldn't mind which shape glass was used. All together now, Ah poor soul.

Teetime Tue 02-Jun-15 09:11:17

We use flutes but rather large ones!!! I bought then in Homebase. I do think the saucer type look very stylish though. I don't mind how Champagne is served as long as it is! smile
PS I don't put any glasses in the dishwasher its seems to make them cloudy over time.

Nelliemoser Tue 02-Jun-15 09:09:48

I imagine that the wider saucer glasses would lose the bubbles far quicker. but the flutes are awkward to use.

vampirequeen Tue 02-Jun-15 09:09:30

I think you should drink champagne from a white wine glass or a burgundy glass for the best fizz and flavours. Other than that a champagne tulip is better than a flute or bowl.

Not that I drink champagne. It's just the range of glasses for all sorts of drinks that fascinate me.

ninathenana Tue 02-Jun-15 09:05:55

We have flutes which I wash with an old babies bottle brush kitty.
Not that I give a damn but I think I read somewhere that it was very old hat to serve champagne in a coup thanks for that word J52 smile

J52 Tue 02-Jun-15 08:59:52

It would seem that those with larger noses find flutes difficult to drink from! Or so I am told, by some male acquaintances.

I have seen some beautiful Edwardian champagne coups with hollow stems, apparently this helps to maintain the bubbles. Cheers. x

feetlebaum Tue 02-Jun-15 08:06:12

I use a wine glass for any wine... li'l ol' wine-drinker me! Oh, unless I want to be reminded of cheap red plonk drunk in a French village café, when I'll use a shot glass...

I think the flat saucer-like champagne glass was a Victorian abomination, wasn't it? Like fish knives and forks...

TwiceAsNice Tue 02-Jun-15 07:43:39

I once heard if you drank champagne from a flute with a straw it made you drunk quicker I don't know if that's true or an old wives tale, perhaps I should try it out and report back!

kittylester Tue 02-Jun-15 07:26:09

One could use a straw in a flute, I suppose.

kittylester Tue 02-Jun-15 07:24:53

Flutes are a bugger flipping nuisance to wash up.Ours can't go in the dishwasher but topple over in the draining basket! On the other hand, the saucers take more storage space! Isn't life difficult?

absent Tue 02-Jun-15 00:56:18

phoenix It's not a problem if your butler is sufficiently alert to keep topping up the flute. grin

Elegran Tue 02-Jun-15 00:01:29

The babycham-type glasses are not so likely to get knocked over though, and they do spray champagne up your nose quite effectively.