Whatever your cost is, multiply that number by 2.5 and that's your bottle price. Multiply your cost by 3.5 and then divide by five (number of glasses in a bottle) and that's your glass price. Do not sell expensive wines by the glass!
In the United States, the "proof" descriptor for a bottle of liquor is defined as twice the percentage of alcohol by volume. Thus, a bottle labeled as "100 proof" will consist of 50% alcohol-content.
Double the percent alcohol. 40% alc is 80 proof. 200 proof is pure alc.
The answer varies in each different liquor, and should be listed on the bottle as "proof". The "Proof" is twice the alcohol percentage, so 40 proof is 20% alcohol, 180 proof is 90% alcohol.
no
25 per bottle
Yes, by using a hydrometer.
first we have to take the weight of the empty bottle list. then to take the weight of the bottle with remaining liquor. take the variance in gms and convert it into litres.
At least a 6-pack and maybe a 12-pack of beer, a small bottle of liquor, a larger bottle of cheap liquor, or a decent bottle of wine.
From a bottle of liquor.
Liquor Bottle KY drb-230 119 72 I was wondering what its worth is?
$5.50
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