Shot glass

Three shot glasses of varying shape and size
Shot glasses with a variety of designs. Shot glasses such as these are often collected as novelty items.

A shot glass is a small glass designed to hold or measure spirits or liquor, which is either drunk straight from the glass ("a shot") or poured into a cocktail. A "shot" of liquor is not the same as a "shooter".

Shot glasses decorated with a wide variety of toasts, advertisements and humorous pictures are popular souvenirs and collectibles.[1]

Name origin

Several examples also exist from the 1930s.[2][3] However, although it was used by some,[4][5] the term apparently did not come into common usage until much later.

Many references from the 1800s describe giving a jigger (2 US fl oz or 59 millilitres before Prohibition[6]) of whiskey or rum to workers who were digging canals. Most shot glasses are found in the United States, but shot glasses from before the 1940s are very rare.[7]

Earliest shot glasses

Some of the earliest small whiskey glasses in America from the late 1700s to early 1800s were called "whiskey tasters" or "whiskey tumblers" and were hand blown. They are thick similar to today's shot glasses but will show a pontil scar on the bottom or will show a cupped area on the bottom where the pontil scar was ground and polished off. Some of these glasses even have hand-applied handles and decorations hand cut by a grinding wheel.

In the early to mid-1800s, glass blowers began to use molds and several different patterns of "whiskey tasters" in several different colors were being made in molds. These glasses are also thick like today's shot glass but they will have rough pontiled bottoms from being hand blown into the mold. By the 1870s to 1890s as glass making technology improved, the rough pontiled bottoms largely disappeared from glasses and bottles.

Just before Prohibition in the U.S. in the late 1800s to early 1900s, thin-sided mass-produced whiskey glasses were common. Many of these glasses feature etched advertising on them. After Prohibition, these were replaced by shot glasses with a thick base and thick sides.

Sizes

Country Small Single Double Notes
Australia 30 ml 60 ml A single shot is sometimes called a "nip".[8] At 30 mL, a typical spirit with 40 percent alcohol is roughly equivalent to one Australian standard drink.[9]
Bulgaria 50 ml 100 ml
Canada 28.4 ml (1 imp fl oz)[10] is a short shot (pony shot) 42.6 ml (1.5 imp fl oz) 71.0 ml (2.5 imp fl oz) In Canada, a "shot" generally refers to the province's definition of a "standard drink" under liquor licenses. Although sizes may vary, most provinces cite amounts similar to Ontario's guidelines of 0.6 imp fl oz or 17.0 ml of pure alcohol. Since a "shot" is typically a spirit with 40 percent alcohol, this makes the shot 1.5 imp fl oz or 42.6 ml (though many establishments serve a "standard drink" of 1 oz).[11] A double shot in North America may be either 2.5 or 3 fluid ounces.[12] A smaller 1.0 fl. oz. shot is usually referred to as a "pony shot" or "short shot".[13]
Denmark 20 ml 40 ml
Estonia 20 or 30 ml 40 ml
Finland 20 ml 40 ml N/A In Finland, the amount of strong alcohol restaurants are allowed to serve is regulated by law to one portion of no more than 40 mL at a time per customer. Doubles cannot be legally served.[14]
Germany 20 ml 40 ml In Germany, shot glasses (German: Schnapsglas, Pinnchen, Stamperl) are smaller.
Greece 45 ml 90 ml A shot is commonly referred to as a "sfinaki" and it can be made of one liquor or a cocktail mix. There is also an 3 oz – "bottoms up" version of "sfinaki", called "ipovrihio", Greek word for submarine. It's served in a standard liquor glass half full of blonde beer, where the bartender adds a glass shot filled with vodka or whiskey.
Hungary 20 or 30 ml 40 or 50 ml 80 or 100 ml In Hungarian, shot glasses are called felespohár (feles meaning "half", standing for 0.5 dl), pálinkáspohár (for pálinka), kupica or stampedli.
India 30 ml 30 ml 60 ml A shot is commonly referred to as a "peg", and is measured as a "small" (chhota), or a "large" (bud-da) peg. A 120 ml shot in India is called a Patiala peg.[15]
Ireland 35.5 ml 71 ml Derived from the use of a quarter-gill (35.516 ml, one-sixteenth of a pint) as the traditional Irish spirit measure.
Israel 30 ml 50 or 60 ml In Israel, the common word for a small shot is צ'ייסר ("chaser").
Italy 30 ml 40 or 60 ml In Italy, the common word for a shot is cicchetto or, more informally and used mainly in nightclubs by young people, shortino. In North Italy, the cicchetto is the most-common way to taste grappa from at least two centuries.
Japan 30 ml 60 ml In Japanese, the word ショットグラス (shottogurasu) is the singular term for a shot glass.
Poland 25 ml 50 ml 100 ml To take shots in Polish slang is to take po pięćdziesiątce, meaning to take "by fifties" (50 ml).
Romania 50 ml 100 ml A single shot is traditionally known in the Romanian language as unu mic (una mică) meaning "a small one" or cinzeacă, meaning "a fifty", as in fifty milliliters. A double shot is simply called unu (una mare), meaning "one (big)".
Russia 50 ml 100 ml Both single and double shots are commonly called стопка (stópka) in Russian, though a variety of slang names exist. Before metrication a single shot was called шкалик (shkálik) and amounted to 61.5ml, while a double was called чарка (chárka) and was equal to 123ml — both names are still occasionally used.
Serbia 20 ml 30–50 ml 50–70 ml A single shot is traditionally known in the Serbian language as чашица за ракију and ракијска чашица, meaning "small glass for rakija" and "rakija glass", or simply as мера—мерица, meaning "measure". A double shot is simply called Дупли, meaning "a double", while the smallest, 20 milliliter glass, is known as dvojka meaning "two".
Sweden 20 ml 40 ml 60 ml A single shot is referred to as a fyra, meaning "a four" and a double is referred to as a sexa, meaning "a six", as Swedes generally use centiliters rather than milliliters.
Slovakia 20 or 25 ml 40 or 50 ml 80 or 100 ml The most-common single-shot size is the pol deci (literally, "half a decilitre", 50 ml).
South Africa 25 ml The South African government has an official definition for the single-shot size.
United Kingdom 25 or 35 ml 50 or 70 ml Shots sold on-premises must contain either 25 ml or 35 ml measures of whisky, gin, rum, or vodka as defined in the Weights and Measures Act of 1985. This requirement does not extend to other spirits. A 2001 amendment allowed a double shot of 70 ml to be served. Generally, a single measure is equal to 35 ml in Northern Ireland and Scotland and 25 ml in England and Wales.[16]
United States 30 ml (1 US fluid ounce) 44 ml (1.5 US fl oz) 89 ml (3 US fl oz) There is no standard size for a single shot, except in Utah, where a shot is defined as 1.5 US fl oz (44 ml).[17] Elsewhere in the U.S., the standard size is generally considered to be 1.25–1.5 US fl oz (37–44 ml).[18][19]

Shot-measuring tools

Jigger

Variety of jiggers

A jigger or measure is a bartending tool used to measure liquor, which is typically then poured into a cocktail shaker. A traditional style of jigger is made of stainless steel with two unequal sized opposing cones in an hourglass shape on the end of a rod. Typically, one cone measures a regulation single shot, and the other some fraction or multiple—with the actual sizes depending on local laws and customs.

The jigger is named for the unit of liquid it typically measures, a jigger or shot, which is historically defined as 2 handfuls (2 fluid ounces) or 12 of a jack in the traditional binary submultiple (a.k.a. English doubling) system. This means that its actual volume varies between the U.K. and the U.S., and also varies over time, by manufacturer, and geographically, as this relationship has been forgotten. In the U.S. up until Prohibition, it was widely known to be 2.0 US fluid ounces (2.1 imp fl oz; 59 ml),[20] but starting in the latter part of the 20th century, it is most commonly interpreted to be 1.5 US fluid ounces (1.6 imp fl oz; 44 ml).[21]

However, bar jiggers come in other sizes and ratios, and may not actually measure a fluid jigger.

Kitchen shot

A small shot glass specifically marketed for kitchen use is graduated in units such as ounce and half ounce, teaspoons, tablespoons or possibly millilitres. They are useful for recipes that call for multiples of a smaller unit (e.g. several teaspoons), allowing the dispensing of the amount in a single measure.[22]

See also

References

  1. Mark Pickvet (Oct 1, 1998). The Encyclopedia of Shot Glasses. Glass Press, Inc.
  2. "...whiskey and sour, which was served in a 2-ounce "shot" glass..." American Law Reports (annotated), Volume 66 (1930). Lawyers Co-operative Publishing Company (via Google Books).
  3. "He held his shot glass upside down and watched the last few drops of whisky roll down the side of the glass" Prairie Schooner, Volumes 13–14 (1939). University of Nebraska Press (via Google Books).
  4. "...and brought out a bottle of brandy and a shot glass..." The Portsmouth Times (via Google News). September 6, 1941.
  5. "...characters nursing a shot glass late at night in men's bars..." St. Petersburg Times (via Google News). August 1, 1955.
  6. Willett, Andrew (2016). Elemental Mixology. p. 82.
  7. "The Pre-Prohibition Collector's Resource Site". Pre-pro.com. Retrieved October 16, 2010.
  8. "Alcohol - Standard drinks guide". alcohol.gov.au.
  9. "Standard Drinks Guide". Australia: Department of Health and Ageing. Retrieved April 10, 2011.
  10. "Weights and Measures Act". Canada: Department of Justice. Retrieved November 24, 2011.
  11. Smart Serve Ontario: Hospitality Industry Training Organization of Ontario. Smart Serve Ontario: Responsible Alcohol Beverage Service Training (2002). Queen's Printer for Ontario, p. 6.
  12. Rowlett, Russ. "Units: D". How Many? A Dictionary of Units of Measurement. University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Retrieved May 19, 2008.
  13. "Shot Glass". Glass info. The Webtender. Retrieved May 19, 2008.
  14. §24
  15. Kirin Narayan, Love, stars, and all that, Piatkus, 1995, ISBN 978-0-7499-0265-0, A Patiala peg is as high as the distance between pinky and index finger.
  16. "1 Unit" (PDF format).
  17. Mark. "Shotglass Size". Shotglass.org: a site for shotglasses and other similar items. Retrieved May 19, 2008.
  18. Graham, Colleen. "Shot Glass". Cocktails: The Glassware Tour. About.com. Retrieved May 19, 2008.
  19. Rowlett, Russ. "Units: S". How Many? A Dictionary of Units of Measurement. University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Retrieved May 19, 2008.
  20. Willett, Andrew (2016). Elemental Mixology. p. 8. Retrieved 2016-10-03.
  21. Feller, Robyn M. (2003). The Complete Bartender. Berkley Books. ISBN 978-0-425-19013-5.
  22. "An example of a kitchen shot from a kitchenware manufacturer". Kitchen shot. Anchor Hocking. Retrieved Feb 1, 2013.
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