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man, i really offended people by saying that.
sorry bout that.
what i really meant was that as far as what ive been told, i am pulling 1.75 ounce shots at 25-30 seconds each time using the same amount of pressure. so as far as i know, i ws getting good espresso, therefore i said i "got it down"
ill try to watch my words now.
but i agree, espresso is more important than milk, its just i havent a clue what to do aside from what im doing now. in training i was told 1.75-2 ounces in 25-30 seconds is a good espresso. what else is there? so once i got to be able to do that ever time i decided to focus on milk, which i found to be a lot more challenging.
but yea, if anyone could expand on this whole espresso deal that would be great. like what am i supposed to do and look for (also, we only have one type of espresso blend, so its not like i can really expirament with different blends.)
as for my little slip of tongue, i apologize. can we just forget it? its starting to hurt my feelings a tad. hohoho.
thanks
...but i agree, espresso is more important than milk, its just i havent a clue what to do aside from what im doing now. in training i was told 1.75-2 ounces in 25-30 seconds is a good espresso. what else is there? so once i got to be able to do that ever time i decided to focus on milk, which i found to be a lot more challenging.
but yea, if anyone could expand on this whole espresso deal that would be great. like what am i supposed to do and look for (also, we only have one type of espresso blend, so its not like i can really expirament with different blends.)...
thanks
I agree with Joel - milk is important and requires more skill. However! I don’t agree with all the emphasis on art. Flavor with any coffee drink is the goal.
As for art in the top of a cappuccino cup, it goes back to flavor. Does the art improve the flavor? The most beautiful cup of cappuccino I experienced was just Southwest of Syracuse Sicily in a small restaurant on a mountain top. They served me a hand lever drawn cappuccino with hot milk that had a dark brown rim of coffee around the edges with a one inch pile of milk foam in the middle- that was art in my mind. Nothing artificial. I try to duplicate that draw, even today, and always let my milk separate and place the foam on top, hoping for the brown rim of coffee around the edges.
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