Why You Should Pour Drinks Upside Down
Some completely expected, ordinary messes really piss me off. I think itâs because Iâm fully aware that the mess is about to begin. Specifically, every time I open a new carton of almond milk and pour from the carton, it glugs. It glugs and it plops, and the milk splashes onto the counter for me to clean up. Luckily, thereâs an easy fix for this, and itâll forever change the way you pour liquids. Flip the direction you pour out of the carton.
Holding a carton of liquid so the spout is closest to the cup is a natural instinct. Often thereâs a handle involved that further convinces you to hold it this particular way. You hold the spout to pour off the short cliff of the carton, so the stream has only one place to go. Then suddenly the âglugâ is triggered and the liquid comes out in spurts and sputters.
When cartons and jugs are full of liquid, a light incline is enough to flood the small opening. Itâs literally a bottleneck effect. The spout allows for a certain capacity of liquid to flow out while also allowing air in to replace it. The weight and force of a large amount of liquid blocks up the spout pretty quickly at the angle youâd need to pour it into a glass and not dribble it down the side, and the air canât easily flow in to replace the liquid. Some of the liquid flows out and the pressure shifts, a bubble of air flows into the carton, the two processes repeat, and the liquid glugs again.

If you flip the carton and pour it off of the higher cliff, you give most of the liquid a reservoir to relax in while only a small amount of liquid inches toward the opening, lessening the demand on the cartonâs spout. This gives you more control, and a consistent avenue for the air to come in above the stream, resulting in a smooth, glug-less pour. Many cartons have a tall seam sticking out of the top, blocking the pour from that angle, but donât let that stop you. You can fold the paper seam down, or you can pour sideways (the third, medium-distance cliff, if you will). Itâs really just that short one you should avoid until youâve used enough of the liquid where the amount remaining and the angle of pouring reach a controllable balance of pressure.
This is great for drinks in jugs or liquid eggs in cartons, but also useful for harsh liquids and chemicals in similar packaging. I found this helpful for decanting coolant, motor oil, or bleach with precision. (Those are messes you donât want to deal with.) Even though it might seem odd at first, give the carton flip a try. Pour safely out there.
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