What Is a Hock Wine Glass?
- In "How to Enjoy Your Wine," Hugh Johnson noted that hock glasses once held 1/4 liter (about 1 ½ cups) of wine. This may have been thought a "fair measure" because German wines were not high in alcohol.
- More recently, the typical hock glass is long-stemmed and has a small cup, sometimes lavishly cut or engraved. The bowl is sometimes brightly colored.
- Hock glasses traditionally have a clear bowl but a tapered, ridged green or smooth brown stem. These colors will disguise the color of the wine--their intent may have been to make it look darker and therefore older and better.
- Alsace, in eastern France, also makes white wines from Germany's riesling grape. Alsatian rieslings were also drunk in brown-stemmed hock glasses.
- German wine writer Jens Priewe thinks that fancy hock glasses date from a time when wine was an expensive luxury. The unsuitable but pretty glasses were meant to be displayed more than used.
They Were Once Big
Small and Pretty
Colors
French, Too
Why a Hock Glass?
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