Skip to main content
Skip to main content

Hot on HuffPost Food:

See More Stories
Tell us what you think for a chance at $1000!

"glasswareguide" news and stories

Liquor and Cocktail Glasses, Part Three - Slashfood's Glassware Guide

hurricane glass
Hurricane Glass


You won't find a specific function with these glasses, but the shape is popular for large, blended frozen drinks that you can sip with a straw. You've seen them before -- restaurants like the Hard Rock Cafe love to put their brand on them.



Irish coffee glassIrish Coffee Glass

The Irish Coffee glass is all about looks. It holds warm beverages like any regular mug; however, the glass is clear to showcase the look of a good Irish coffee, Hot Toddy, or other warm, layered beverage that would benefit from seeing the drink from the side as well as the top.


collins glass
Collins Glass


This tumbler looks much like the highball glass, or a traditional pint glass, but is narrower than both. This shape is mainly for looks, and the history of the Tom Collins drink; therefore, it can be used interchangeably with a highball glass.






Filed under: Stores & Shopping, Drink Recipes

Liquor and Cocktail Glasses, Part Two - Slashfood's Glassware Guide

brandy snifter
Brandy Snifter


The brandy snifter works like a wine glass – gobletted top and stemmed bottom. But this version is a larger, more bulbous, and you only pour a small amount into the base. Unlike other stemmed glassware designed to keep a drink cold, the snifter is designed for the drinker to cup the glass, warm it with their hand, and sniff the aromas with the slightly narrowed rim.





old fashioned glass
Old-Fashioned/Rocks Glass


The shorter version of the highball, this is called a rocks glass because it's often used in drinks served "on the rocks." It's wide, it holds the ice well, and it's the go-to glass for most bar-served mixed drinks. This glass is often used interchangeably with the highball.




highball glass
Highball Glass


This is the other popular glass of the liquor realm. It's the mainstay for any drink that teams alcohol with a mix – gin and tonics, rum and cokes, you name it -- especially when the mix is in a large quantity. The tall stature allows adequate room for ice, liquor, and mix. The versatility of this glass makes it the vessel any bar should stock.





Filed under: Stores & Shopping, Drink Recipes

Sponsored Links

Liquor and Cocktail Glasses, Part One - Slashfood's Glassware Guide

shot glass
Shot Glass


These jiggers give what no other glass can – a quick shot of flavor that slides down the throat in one dose. However, before the seventies, shot glasses were mainly used as jiggers to measure other mixed drinks, rather than vessels for the quick burst of booze. Yet another reason I love the seventies.



martini glass
Martini/Cocktail Glass


The classic martini glass is the most popular go-to vessel for shaken drinks, even if the cocktail in question isn't actually a martini. The size and shape holds no room for ice (bring in the shaker!), and the stem allows the drinker to get through the cocktail without warming the glass and drink with their hands.



margarita glass
Margarita Glass


One of the more unique shapes in the glass world, margarita glasses have a double bowl with an extra-wide upper rim. The narrow base helps amp the color of the drink, while the wide rim allows for salt and other powdered rimmers to be added to the glass.





Filed under: Stores & Shopping, Drink Recipes

Wine Glasses, Part One - Slashfood's Glassware Guide

red wine glass
Red Wine Glass


Luscious red wines need to breathe. We decant them to give them air, and this should continue into the glass itself. The ideal vessel for red wine will be wider than the white variety glass, with an oval/egg shape that has a slightly narrowed top. This will allow the wine to not only breathe, but also preserve aroma when the wine is swirled and aerated. The general rule: The bigger the better.



white wine glass
White Wine Glass

Where reds like to breathe in large glasses, whites are best housed in narrower glasses that taper sharply at the top. Again, the shape helps the concentration of aromas, but it also helps to keep the wine cold by decreasing air circulation, and allows more subtle aromas to be noticed.




Filed under: Stores & Shopping, Drink Recipes

Fastidious Boozing - Slashfood's Glassware Guide

beer glassThere's a stigma attached to those who extol the virtues of proper glassware. But the fact is -- they're right. The vessel used for your drink will affect not only the liquid that's poured inside, but also the way it hits your tongue, and the flavor your taste buds register.

I used to blow this off as overly fastidious, fancy schmancy posturing. I hated getting pints of beer or glasses of soda because it always tasted flat to me. I preferred that crisp bite out of the bottle -- glass be damned!

But then I experienced the differences for myself. While visiting a winery a number of years ago, my friends and I sat in on a glassware class. A myriad of shapes and sizes were placed in front of us, and we tried white, red, and sparkling wine in the different glasses. Each tasted different as it was moved from the standard white glass, to the wider red, to the narrow flute. We were shocked, and we vowed to always try to have the right glass for the right wine, because what's the point of paying more for a good wine, if you can't experience its full flavor?

But it's not just a matter of wine. Recently, I was making dinner and decided to open a bottle of craft beer that I had loved at my favorite pub a few months prior. I popped off the cap, took a drink, and curled my lip -- it not only tasted nothing like I remembered, but I hated it. I thought back and remembered that I drank the beer at the end of the night. Did I have bad, delusional drunken taste buds? I read the side of the bottle, which suggested a specific stemmed glass. I found something close, poured it in, and it became the beer I remembered -- rich, full, and wonderful. Me, the bottle lover, had found a beverage that tasted much, much better out of the bottle.

Now this doesn't mean that you need to have a specific glass for every different type of beer or booze. Get the right glasses, or something very close, for your favorite beverages, and stick to standards for the rest.

Think about it -- why splurge on a great scotch, wine, beer, or other beverage if you're just going to throw it into any old glass?

Read on to see a rundown of the glasses that make each beverage pop, and consider this not only a great guide for your own collection, but an excellent gift for the liquor, wine, or beer fiend on your gift list.


Filed under: Stores & Shopping, Drink Recipes

Most Popular Stories

  • FDA Still Struggling to Define

    FDA Still Struggling to Define "Gluten-Free"Read More

  • This Omelet Recipe Is Written On the Egg Itself

    This Omelet Recipe Is Written On the Egg ItselfRead More

  • Why Jewish Food Disappoints

    Why Jewish Food DisappointsRead More

Latest Flickr Feed


Sponsored Links