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But the martini glass didn’t always house martinis. According to PUNCH, it was introduced at the 1925 Paris Exhibition as a modernist, art deco-inspired take on the coupe. Like the coupe ...
However, there is another type of glass that also enhances the flavors, aroma, and delivery of a martini: the coupe glass. Coupe (pronounced "coop") glasses were first said to be used in the 17th ...
Cody Pruitt, owner of the French bistro Libertine in New York City, is also a fan of these coupetinis because they blend “the classic archetypal V-shaped martini glass and a softer coupe style ...
With an 8-ounce capacity, these coupe glasses might be slightly too large for a standard martini, but they’re perfect for serving a French 75 or any other cocktail topped with sparkling wine.
Only Francesco Clemente, noted Italian painter and a partner with Eleven Madison Park chef Daniel Humm at the new Clemente Bar, has his own martini ... in a vertiginous coupe, is finished with ...
Paul MacDonald, bartender at Friday Saturday Sunday, loves a coupe more than a traditional triangular martini glass. “I’m happy that we’ve managed to reclaim both style and function in a ...
Martini mania, we mean ... (But wait, there’s more: The drink, served in a vertiginous coupe, is finished with a spritz of saffron-flavored liqueur.) Sipped while reclining on a low plush ...