6 and 2/5 glasses
Depending on how much you pour, a bottle can fill 5 or 6 glasses.
Ten of them.
20 glases
1 litre = 1000ml1.5 litre = 1500ml1500/500 = 3 Glasses
A 2-liter bottle can fill approximately 8.45 standard 8-ounce glasses. This calculation is based on the conversion of 1 liter being equivalent to about 33.814 fluid ounces, and 2 liters being equivalent to about 67.628 fluid ounces. Therefore, dividing 67.628 by 8 gives us roughly 8.45 glasses that can be filled from a 2-liter bottle.
Fill Bottle 7 . . . then use bottle 7 to fill bottle 5 . . Empty bottle 5 and put the remaining two litres from bottle 7 into bottle 5 . . Fill bottle 7 then use bottle 7 to fill bottle 5 . . empty bottle 5 . . Fill bottle 5 with the remaining 4 litres in bottle 7 . . fill bottle 7 and then use bottle 7 to fill bottle 5 . . this will leave you with 6 litres in bottle 7 . . Done
4 to 6 standard champagne glasses per 750 ml bottle. The bottle is technically 25.3 ounces which would indicate that 6 glasses should be expected, but I find if you really fully fill the champagne glass you only get about 4 servings per bottle.
The traditional long stemmed champagne flute holds 6 ounces to the rim. The normal serving would be 3 ounces as they are never filled completely to the top for toasts. To figure the answer we take 25.4 and divide that by 3: 25.4 ÷ 3 = 8.47 glasses. Since we cannot fill a glass with .47 of an ounce the answer is 8 glasses would be the yield for that volume of champagne bottle.
You can fill 7.2 glasses (approximately 7 full glasses) with 2 quarts of liquid in 10 ounce glasses.
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A 70 centilitre bottle contains 700 millilitres (since 1 centilitre equals 10 millilitres). To find out how many 150 ml glasses can be filled, divide 700 ml by 150 ml. This results in approximately 4.67, meaning you can fill 4 full glasses of 150 ml, with some liquid left over.
A 750 ml bottle of champagne is equal to about 25 fluid ounces. So if you're using 6oz glasses you could fill four of them up and have a little left over.