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Why do people hit the table with their glass after a toast -- before taking the shot or drink?
Cheers. Tap tabletop with bottom of glass, drink. I do it, other people do it. But, why? Where did the tradition start? I've heard many wildly different urban legends, but where did it really begin and what does it mean? Does anyone have written evidence to back up their claims?
Someone asked the question here three years ago, but everyone had a different answer, none definitive.
4 Answers
- Jade OrchidLv 71 decade agoFavorite Answer
The cheers and clinking of glasses together is well documented as having come from medieval times and the sign of trust that your drinking partner didn't slip you deadly poison. But what about the tapping of the glass after the cheers? The reasons for this are simple...
Firstly beer, wine, and liquor, i.e. distilled spirits, were safer to drink in "olden times" than water for purity reasons. We also know that the common man, soldiers and knights, and other lower nobility drank beer because wine and liquor were expensive. Also, back then, drinking was some of the only entertainment to be had and so games and thus traditions that have been carried on to even today, were started by people who drank beer.
So what is the fundamental, and provable, point of the "tap"?
1. After you "clink" your mugs/glasses/pints/etc you cause the head, or the foam, to rise. Tapping it on the bottom causes the head to fall so that you can chug/swill the beer with less of a problem, especially in a drinking contest setting.
2. If you are in a drinking contest the sound of your cup hitting the table, before you drink, and not when you start drinking is usually what the "judges" go by, as to when you started. That is also why the cup is slammed down afterward, to signify the end of your drinking "round".
Where did this tradition come from? Well probably sometime early on when beer became extremely popular as a drink for the masses. Sometimes these obscure traditions and games grew slowly over time and were altered from generation to generation and spread around until we have what we have today. It's like asking about the invention of the game of "Quarters"... but we'll get to that some other time. :D
Source(s): Liquor Store Manager who likes to research obscure liquor and beer facts. As far as "written evidence" I invite you to test the theory out when you next drink beer with friends. You'll soon see the evidence for yourself. http://wineintro.com/champagne/clinkglass.html