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Listen and feel. No thermometers. Pretty standard technique here.
Wand at dead vertical, pitcher tipped slightly to the side, 100% throttle all the time. Slow steady air incorporation before it reaches body temp, then bury it to whip. Watch the vortex and use it to suck up the bigger bubbles, but not letting it get so deep that it causes a "big slurp". Tip the pitcher as necessary to keep it from spilling out on the "high side". Cut off the steam when hot (150ish) and get the wand out at the precise moment steam stops coming out to avoid backwash.
I try to start the steam as soon as I can after starting the shot - usually a second later. I know things are working perfectly when the shots and milk are done at exactly the same time for a 16oz latte. Mildly annoying though, as I always waffle with which one to cut off first :).
I like my milk to finish first, then I have a chance to wipe the wand and purge some steam as I hit the shot button to stop the shot. Just my personal routine I guess.
-bry
Brady said:Listen and feel. No thermometers. Pretty standard technique here.
Wand at dead vertical, pitcher tipped slightly to the side, 100% throttle all the time. Slow steady air incorporation before it reaches body temp, then bury it to whip. Watch the vortex and use it to suck up the bigger bubbles, but not letting it get so deep that it causes a "big slurp". Tip the pitcher as necessary to keep it from spilling out on the "high side". Cut off the steam when hot (150ish) and get the wand out at the precise moment steam stops coming out to avoid backwash. I try to start the steam as soon as I can after starting the shot - usually a second later. I know things are working perfectly when the shots and milk are done at exactly the same time for a 16oz latte. Mildly annoying though, as I always waffle with which one to cut off first :).
Bryan Wray said:I like my milk to finish first, then I have a chance to wipe the wand and purge some steam as I hit the shot button to stop the shot. Just my personal routine I guess.
-bry
Brady said:Listen and feel. No thermometers. Pretty standard technique here.
Wand at dead vertical, pitcher tipped slightly to the side, 100% throttle all the time. Slow steady air incorporation before it reaches body temp, then bury it to whip. Watch the vortex and use it to suck up the bigger bubbles, but not letting it get so deep that it causes a "big slurp". Tip the pitcher as necessary to keep it from spilling out on the "high side". Cut off the steam when hot (150ish) and get the wand out at the precise moment steam stops coming out to avoid backwash. I try to start the steam as soon as I can after starting the shot - usually a second later. I know things are working perfectly when the shots and milk are done at exactly the same time for a 16oz latte. Mildly annoying though, as I always waffle with which one to cut off first :).
Yeah, that'd be awfully convenient. I fill the pitcher, grind/dose/tamp, load, hit the button, start to steam. I figure this way the espresso doesn't sit there and cook. YMMV
Listen and feel. No thermometers. Pretty standard technique here.
Wand at dead vertical, pitcher tipped slightly to the side, 100% throttle all the time. Slow steady air incorporation before it reaches body temp, then bury it to whip. Watch the vortex and use it to suck up the bigger bubbles, but not letting it get so deep that it causes a "big slurp". Tip the pitcher as necessary to keep it from spilling out on the "high side". Cut off the steam when hot (150ish) and get the wand out at the precise moment steam stops coming out to avoid backwash.
I try to start the steam as soon as I can after starting the shot - usually a second later. I know things are working perfectly when the shots and milk are done at exactly the same time for a 16oz latte. Mildly annoying though, as I always waffle with which one to cut off first :).
Depends on how fast your machine steams milk... With our old school Nuova Simonelli I can load the PF, start the shot immediately and then pour my milk and start steaming and I still finish ahead of the 30ish seconds it takes to finish off the shot. If I know I can't move that fast (some days I just don't feel like moving quickly, to be honest) then I won't load the PF right away and I'll wait until I have the pitcher ready, then load the PF and start both processes. Dunno, works for me I guess...
-bry
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