Champagne is the perfect drink for special occasions as it gets everyone in the mood for celebrating and because virtually everyone loves the odd glass of fizz. The problem this presents, compounded by the relative skill required to open and pour a bottle of Champagne, is that you get through the bottles quicker than you can get them opened and served.
What is the answer? A bigger Champagne bottle size of course. Whereas you can only aim for 6 glasses from a standard bottle with a Nebuchadnezzar you could fill up getting on for 120 glasses depending on how well you pour of course!
Champagne Bottle Sizes
These are the different standard Champagne bottle sizes. They may not all be available in your local pub but if you head to one of the many London clubs Forbidden London work with you will be able to enjoy some very special Champagne from the biggest Champagne bottles.
- Quarter Bottle (187.5ml – equivelant to a quarter of a standard size bottle of Champagne)
- Half Bottle (375ml – equivelant to a half of a standard size bottle of Champagne)
- Bottle (750ml – a standard size bottle of Champagne)
- Magnum (1.5 litres - equivelant to two standard size bottle of Champagne)
- Jeroboam (3 litres – equivelant to four standard size bottle of Champagne)
- Rehoboam (4.5 litres – equivelant to six standard size bottle of Champagne)
- Methuselah (6 litres – equivelant to eight standard size bottle of Champagne)
- Salmanazar (9 litres – equivelant to twelve standard size bottle of Champagne)
- Balthazar (12 litres – equivelant to sixteen standard size bottle of Champagne)
- Nebuchadnezzar (15 litres – equivelant to twenty standard size bottle of Champagne)











