The Tiny Cordial Glass Is Designed to Serve ‘Just Enough of Something Special’
Highly decorative and diminutive in size, the cordial glass makes whatever is served within feel extraordinary. [...] Read More... The post The Tiny Cordial Glass Is Designed to Serve ‘Just Enough of Something Special’ appeared first on Wine Enthusiast.
Dainty and elegantly designed, the cordial glass is the darling of the bar cabinet, one whose diminutive stature belies its impact as a vessel imbued with history, aesthetics and ceremonial flair.
Once ubiquitous, the tiny stemware fell out of favor as more versatile, universal glassware took hold. But bartenders and home cocktailians have recently been rediscovering this twee tipple holder.
“There’s just something intoxicating about the cordial glass,” according to Dianne O’Connor, founder and CEO of Weston Table, an online homeware marketplace. “Its restrained size yet appealing presence has renewed its reputation.”
‘Just Enough of Something Delicious’
The widely-accepted definition of a cordial glass is a petite glass with a flared top whose bowl is designed to hold around an ounce-and-a-half to two ounces of liquid, according to Laurie Furber, the founder of Elsie Green, a mostly vintage digital and brick-and-mortar shop in Northern California. It often touts a tall stem, but sometimes just an attractive foot.
“Typically it’ll have some sort of drama to the design—be very short or very tall, with etched details or cut panels—to give it a bit of ceremony,” Furber says. “Its purpose is to dispense just enough of something delicious.”
“They’re sexy. They’re sophisticated. They’re a smooth way to end a meal,” declares Will Patton, beverage director for Hive Hospitality and managing partner of the Washington, D.C. cocktail bar Press Club.
But while he describes a cordial glass as generally stemmed and tulip-shaped, he also submits that it’s a glassware style that’s tricky to generalize.
“Cordials are such a broad and diverse category, with distinct ties to culture of origin, that it’s hard to say that the traditional Western dessert wine glass should be conflated with the standard cocktail glass.”
After all, he adds, Chartreuse is often served in a snifter, while Italian amaro can be sipped neat in a rocks glass.
The Cordial Glass’s Disappearing Act — and Reemergence
As O’Connor explains, the cordial glass has its roots in the digestif culture of fifteenth-century Europe, when fortified wines, brandies, liqueurs and spirits were infused with fruits, herbs and spices to sip after dinner.
“The petite size of the glass was originally purported to serve ultra-concentrated alcohol that would aid in digestion following an evening of feasting,” she says. The glass itself was created in the 1700s, became fashionable with European nobility in the nineteenth century and eventually found its way across the pond.