Bormioli Rocco Barware Set
- Model: 1.24490, 1.57130, 1.57100, 2.20149, 1.25140
- Choose from sets of 4 Martini glasses, 4 beer glasses, 6 Old Fashioned, 6 Double Old Fashioned, or 6 cooler glasses
- We upped our quantity limit to five so you can get one of each for a full set
- Made of actual glass by actual Italians in actual Italy
- Wash Martini glasses by hand - the rest are dishwasher safe
- Classy barware means you can drink all day like Don Draper and people will still think you’re a genius
What's the difference between "a hobby" and "a problem"?
What does drinking mean to you? The world of cocktails can be a fascinating exploration of flavors, techniques, history, and lore. There’s a rich array of new sensations to experience between the time-honored traditions of classic bartending and the cutting-edge trends of the new wave of mixology.
Or you could dump some hooch in a Big Gulp cup and pummel your brain into jelly, turning drinking into a pathetic scramble for sloppy, vomit-splashed oblivion. Even if the end result is similar, one is a hobby, a pastime, an elevating, refined leisure pursuit. The other is a problem. One is like having your tastebuds kissed by an angel; the other is like getting kicked in the head by a donkey. One makes you Don Draper; the other makes you Otis the town drunk.
You don’t want a drinking problem. You want a drinking hobby. The right barware makes all the difference. Here you’ve got five sets to choose from. The pulled-stem Martini glass is made for all those shaken and stirred cocktails. The Old Fashioned glass is for your lowballs and other drinks over ice, while the Double Old Fashioned is for bigger versions of the same. The cooler glasses are bigger than typical tumblers, for extra-large highballs, or maybe as a spill-reducing option for drinks that a novice mixologist must stir in the glass. And the beer glass is for, yes, beer.
With some of these glasses, a decent cocktail guide, and a few ingredients always on hand, your drinking is an interesting new skill you’re learning, not a tragic waste of your life. Tragically wasting your life is what your job is for.