Originally posted by gingerjedi
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Reply to: The PayStream banner add
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Previously on "The PayStream banner add"
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Originally posted by shaunbhoy View PostI am sure there are parts of Yorkshire where they still provide slightly larger than normal glasses to accommodate a frothy head on a pint? Perhaps someone can confirm...........assuming that by now the internet has reached Yorkshire?
They do seem to be more common up North. I think this is probably because, traditionally, Northern ales (such as Tetley) have been served with a large creamy head, whereas Southern ales tended to be brewed to have very little head (for example, Suffolk ales such as Adnams and Greene King always used to be served, in their own pubs, with virtually no head to speak of).
Serving beer with a large head is a big moneyspinner for the large brewers. They are allowed to get away with a head of up to 10% of the volume, meaning that every eleventh pint costs them nothing. This is why they object so strongly to the mandatory use of lined glasses.
They also foster the notion that a large head is somehow normal by only ever showing beer with a large head in their advertising. However, this ignores the variety of regional variations surrounding this matter.
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Everybody knows that the correct British response to being served a pint like that is:
“kin’ell mate… do I get spoon with that”.
Home or abroad.
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Originally posted by milanbenes View Postwell I have to contend, anybody who has worked in Germany, Belgium, Central Europe, Austria, would _expect_ a pint to be served like that, and if it wasn't they would worry that the beer is off.
Milan.
unless they're checking your right to work before serving you these days...
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Originally posted by shaunbhoy View PostI am sure there are parts of Yorkshire where they still provide slightly larger than normal glasses to accommodate a frothy head on a pint? Perhaps someone can confirm...........assuming that by now the internet has reached Yorkshire?
The pint glass was indeed oversize, with a line about half an inch from the brim indicating where the pint measure was up to
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Originally posted by NickFitz View PostBut in those places it wouldn't be a pint - it would be half-a-litre, but in a pint-sized glass to make room for the large head. Serving a pint with a head that large on it in the UK would be illegal under the Weights and Measures Act.
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Originally posted by milanbenes View Postwell I have to contend, anybody who has worked in Germany, Belgium, Central Europe, Austria, would _expect_ a pint to be served like that, and if it wasn't they would worry that the beer is off.
Milan.
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Originally posted by milanbenes View PostMorning All,
you see the PayStream banner add at the top of the screen,
it says:
'You wouldn't accept a lizza like this...
(photograph of pizza with piece missing)
or a pint, served like this...
(photograph of a pint with a good head)'
well I have to contend, anybody who has worked in Germany, Belgium, Central Europe, Austria, would _expect_ a pint to be served like that, and if it wasn't they would worry that the beer is off.
Milan.
Leave a comment:
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The PayStream banner add
Morning All,
you see the PayStream banner add at the top of the screen,
it says:
'You wouldn't accept a lizza like this...
(photograph of pizza with piece missing)
or a pint, served like this...
(photograph of a pint with a good head)'
well I have to contend, anybody who has worked in Germany, Belgium, Central Europe, Austria, would _expect_ a pint to be served like that, and if it wasn't they would worry that the beer is off.
Milan.Tags: None
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