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consp 4 hours ago

A pint in the Netherlands usually is 500ml. In very rare cases, but only in real pubs (not mass market "Irish" pubs) you get an actual pint. So you are cheated out of about ~68ml in that case. Vs the US you get a few ml more.

amiga386 4 hours ago | parent | next [-]

As far as I knew, Netherlands pubs typically sold:

- 200ml "fluitje" (little flute)

- 250ml "pintje" (little pint), often sold in a "vaasje" (vase, a tapered beer glass). This is the typical beer measure: https://nl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pintje "Het bestelde glas pils heeft doorgaans een inhoud van 25 cl"

They also sell standard bottled beer in 300ml and standard cans in 330ml: https://nl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Standaardglas

I was not aware that 500ml was usual for the Netherlands. It is usual in, say, Germany, where they also sell the 1 litre Maß

ahartmetz 2 hours ago | parent [-]

The Maß is only a thing in Bavaria and strongly Bavarian-themed places, and almost nonexistent for bottles or cans anywhere in Germany. Faxe (which is Danish) sells one liter cans and some Czech brands sell or used to sell 1.5 liter plastic bottles - that's about it. The next common size is 5 liter mini kegs.

jcul 3 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

Do they actually call it a pint or just a half litre / large beer?

That's seems to be the norm in a lot of mainland Europe.

ch_123 4 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

A standard US pint is about 473ml so a US pint is ~95ml less than an imperial pint.

thrance 4 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

Same thing here in France. Except I've never seen any "real" pints here, it's always 50cl.