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The drink order is for 18 person group, all of them wanting to sit inside to enjoy their drinks. This shop is a night time hot spot.
I prefer to make one drink at a time, but I want to find tips on how to make latte art when busy.
I would be careful with the templates. People who drink lattes sometimes do not like cocoa on their drink unless they ordered it. Plus it takes less time to pour latte art than it does to whip out a stencil for every drink!
Pouring for big orders is difficult.
You cannot do it together.
The trick is to separate in order of priority. People who order regular lattes come first, flavored second, small regular drinks next, espressos. and lastly decaf.
the logic is this: Keep caffeinated individuals first because they are nursing an addiction and will be less patient,
-larger drinks first because it gives you the opportunity to adjust the grind if it is off by a second or two(not advocating bad shots but a shot that is one or two seconds out of ideal will be fine in 12-16 ounce bevs,
-next is the flavored...yet another opportunity to be reading those shots in preparation for the naked truth of the flavor in you small drinks and reg shot...also if you steam flavor into the milk(which is PERFECTLY FINE...DOES NOT CAUSE MACHINE TROUBLE) you can utilize any small amount of milk left over from the non flavored lattes.
-next small caffeinated. By now you have made micro adjustments so that the shot quality will will really shine in the small volume of milk...if flavored is ordered do the reg first flavored last...
-next espresso...(of course if you feel it is perfect in the beginning you can serve it right away)
-last is decaf...
You may also just want to get the purists satisfied immediately and get to the flavor crowd later.
Point is that you have to have a system set up that gives you a game plan for every possible combination that maybe ordered from your menu...lots of people just put things on the menu and think nothing of it...until people start ordering. At first at a trickle its fine...but when the rush hits...now your in the weeds and it's all because you planned your menu over time for efficiency on a slow bar and were surprised by a fast one...rather than the other way round.
This system helped me when working at Carriage House Cafe in Ithaca as we were a restaurant and had tickets for whole tables com in at the same time.
You can split milk for 6-12 ounces...12 is harder and may actually take more time as the steaming is doubled and you have to take time to pour off into another pitcher as you go...this isn't so much a factor with 6 ounce.
Work flow for the barista should be an exercise in efficiency.
Hope this helps...in the end...customers will always have to wait...we just make sure to pretend like they should'nt
I would be careful with the templates. People who drink lattes sometimes do not like cocoa on their drink unless they ordered it. Plus it takes less time to pour latte art than it does to whip out a stencil for every drink!
Pouring for big orders is difficult.
You cannot do it together.
The trick is to separate in order of priority. People who order regular lattes come first, flavored second, small regular drinks next, espressos. and lastly decaf.
the logic is this: Keep caffeinated individuals first because they are nursing an addiction and will be less patient,
-larger drinks first because it gives you the opportunity to adjust the grind if it is off by a second or two(not advocating bad shots but a shot that is one or two seconds out of ideal will be fine in 12-16 ounce bevs,
-next is the flavored...yet another opportunity to be reading those shots in preparation for the naked truth of the flavor in you small drinks and reg shot...also if you steam flavor into the milk(which is PERFECTLY FINE...DOES NOT CAUSE MACHINE TROUBLE) you can utilize any small amount of milk left over from the non flavored lattes.
-next small caffeinated. By now you have made micro adjustments so that the shot quality will will really shine in the small volume of milk...if flavored is ordered do the reg first flavored last...
-next espresso...(of course if you feel it is perfect in the beginning you can serve it right away)
-last is decaf...
You may also just want to get the purists satisfied immediately and get to the flavor crowd later.
Point is that you have to have a system set up that gives you a game plan for every possible combination that maybe ordered from your menu...lots of people just put things on the menu and think nothing of it...until people start ordering. At first at a trickle its fine...but when the rush hits...now your in the weeds and it's all because you planned your menu over time for efficiency on a slow bar and were surprised by a fast one...rather than the other way round.
This system helped me when working at Carriage House Cafe in Ithaca as we were a restaurant and had tickets for whole tables com in at the same time.
You can split milk for 6-12 ounces...12 is harder and may actually take more time as the steaming is doubled and you have to take time to pour off into another pitcher as you go...this isn't so much a factor with 6 ounce.
Work flow for the barista should be an exercise in efficiency.
Hope this helps...in the end...customers will always have to wait...we just make sure to pretend like they should'nt
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