A village in a nearby province has been making it for the beer shops and no one else since the 1960s
For fans of Hanoi's famous fresh beer, or bia hoi, the rough looking glasses that are used to serve the beer must be just as fascinating.
Otherwise, beer shop owners will not go all the way to Xoi Tri village in Nam Dinh Province, dozens of kilometers away, to specifically procure these glasses -- a practice believed to date back to the 1960s.
Though Xoi Tri was famous as a glass-making village decades ago when 85 percent of residents did the job, now only three families make glass products, including the bia hoi glasses which they only produce on order.
Only made in Hanoi's bia hoi glasses
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A huge pile of glass shards in the yard of Pham Ngoc Han's house. Han and his family are among the three last glass makers in Xoi Tri.
Glass shards are broken into smaller pieces of uniform size.
The glass shards are melted in a furnace for around six hours.
One of the steps after blowing is to cut the glass's rim.
Before the blowing stage, the melted glass is placed in a steel mold.
The glass is kept at a fixed temperature during the stage of rim cutting. .
A specialized gas oven is used to maintain the glass's temperature.
After rim cutting, the glass is moved to room temperature. Then workers use a bottle to refine its shape.
The hot glass is buried under ashes so that it does not cool down quickly, or else it will crack or break.
The glass makers say only Hanoi shop owners order these glasses these days. In the past they wanted 500 ml glasses, but now prefer them smaller.
These rough-looking glasses can only be found in Hanoi bia hoi shops and nowhere else, not even at Xoi Tri village where they are made.
Source: thanhniennews
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