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Well, actually, there is a huge difference in the milk texture of a cappuccino and a latte, so the volume of the drink is entirely negligible. A cappuccino is not defined by it's volume, though it is a necessary condition for it to truly be a cappuccino.
Andrew Tagge said:Well, actually, there is a huge difference in the milk texture of a cappuccino and a latte, so the volume of the drink is entirely negligible. A cappuccino is not defined by it's volume, though it is a necessary condition for it to truly be a cappuccino.
Huh?
Well, actually, there is a huge difference in the milk texture of a cappuccino and a latte, so the volume of the drink is entirely negligible. A cappuccino is not defined by it's volume, though it is a necessary condition for it to truly be a cappuccino.
Ricky Sutton said:I think a 6oz. latte is treading a little too close to the borderline of being a capp for my taste. Then again so is a gibraltar, but i drink those on occasion. I never have drinks with syrup, but if i did Monin's Toffee Nut would totally be the way to go.
Russell Greene said:I usally pull my espresso straight into a 1/2 oz of syrup but I don't make any drinks bigger than 6oz any bigger than that and it's like an espresso in a sea of milk. I asked for a 6oz latte at some coffee bar in snotsdale and the guy looked at me like I was crazy. I actually had to explain to him to only use 4 oz of milk. Toffee nut is where it's at
On another note - an American tourist once came in and asked what flavoured lattes we did, I told him "we do vanilla, caramal, and hazelnut - but if your game we have an excellent coffee flavour" he said he'd give it a go, not realising I had actually made a joke, I handed him a regular latte, and he said it was the best he'd ever had... Still thinking I had put some magical syrup in there.
I think i will buy a few more grinders and have the option for blueberry latte's with Ethiopian, mocha's with Costa rican, etc. I'm sure that would go over well with my customers and my speed, efficiency & budget. Where do you work, cause' i want to work there too.
Malt Barista said:To be totally honest, why use syrup at all...rather seek a single origin coffee that would provide you with the flavor profile your after....but I probably have to help you out..
well here it is... besides pre-heating the cup....put the syrup in a shot glass and heat it in a froth pitcher with some water... this makes the syrup the same temp and density of the espresso that you will extract ON TOP OF the syrup....
still think you should look into the single origin thing though...
anywho..cheers
I agree about the volume issue. I pull my shots around 1.75 oz. between days 2-3 post roast, dosing at about 19 gr. in an 18 gr. synesso basket. Days 4-5 it's 1.5 oz. with a 20 gr. dose. Days 6-8 it's 1.25 oz. with a 21 gr. dose. These are all ROUGH estimates, but they're the guidelines that i start a shift with before i begin tweaking.
I strongly disagree about blonding. As i said before, i can pull a 40 second shot without seeing any blonding at all. That shot would not be ideal. It's not as simple as blonde espresso tastes bad and brown espresso tastes good. I've had plenty of experience with rich reddish-brown espresso tasting terrible if something is off. More rarely, sometimes the stream thinning out a little bit is exactly what a shot needs. Since the last few seconds of the shot seem to be where a lot of the more floral and acidic flavors reside, sometimes having those present in a capp for instance helps the espresso to have a more present personality in the drink.
For my current espressophilosophy, it's all about extraction. Too much time or surface area, bitter and astringent. Too little time or surface area, sour or underdeveloped. Time (dictated by grind size/dose) is significantly more important to me than color.
Damon Lurie said:technically the volume of a shot doesnt matter, its actually the colour, once the running esspresso comming straight from the pf starts turning a light tawny colour you know the shot is ready, measurement arent flexible enough cause they dont account for the differences in grind, bean and age of the bean
Ricky Sutton said:I seem to be a minority in disagreeing with the "espresso directly in the cup it will be consumed in" thing.
I always pull my shots in a demi. My reasons for this are so that i can keep a very strict eye on volume. Were i to put a 16 oz. paper cup under my portafilter, i couldn't see the splitters and therefore have no idea what the shot is doing. To be able to watch the espresso coming from the splitters and watch it pooling in my demi has greatly increased the consistency of my shots. Also espresso kind of stays in the layers it is produced in. The espresso at the bottom tastes super dense and bassy (chocolates, caramels, toffee etc.), the middle of the shot is the fruit and the top is citrus and floral. The crema is invariably the ashy and bittersweet qualities. Those profiles will change depending on, well everything. But the theory is there that shots don't mix themselves. Which is why i stir my espresso before drinking. Anyway, my point is that if i pull a shot directly into a capp cup and don't vigorously swirl the shot before pouring, those bitters are risen to the surface of the drink as i pour and the top of my capp doesn't taste so great. Then when i reach the bottom, it's super syrupy. If i always pull into demi's then pour the shot into the cup, it's pre-mixed. Sure i lose some crema. It's a sacrifice i currently make in exchange for my drinks tasting better (to me).
As far as syrup is concerned, i always put it in the cup. I've seen a noticeable difference in the texture of my milk when steaming syrup with it.
Alex said a few things, but the part that made me chuckle was this one:On another note - an American tourist once came in and asked what flavoured lattes we did, I told him "we do vanilla, caramal, and hazelnut - but if your game we have an excellent coffee flavour" he said he'd give it a go, not realising I had actually made a joke, I handed him a regular latte, and he said it was the best he'd ever had... Still thinking I had put some magical syrup in there.
Brilliant! I've tried that before too, but it only works if the delivery is perfect. Any touch of sarcasm and it goes wrong in a hurry.
I have only one customer whom insists on syrups! thing is I don't do flavored shit! ruins my Single estate beans!!!! anywho I started putting milkshake topping in it just so I don't look like an idiot standing in line buying coffee syrup!!! but this very morning me and my roaster where talking about origin flavors and this young lass walks in the door. I look at Peter(roaster) and say here we go. she orders her latte with caramel and insists that I make it strong...not the coffee. So I fill an 8 oz cup halfway with milkshake topping. extract a shot ontop of that. topped up with milk and stirred it. as I stirred it I could feel how thick it was!!!
Gave it to her. she took a sip and went...perfect! (I should not have said this but I did) "ah, Glad you like it,'cause I hope I wont be seeing you here again, you embarrass my other clientele."
Brady said:Alex said a few things, but the part that made me chuckle was this one:On another note - an American tourist once came in and asked what flavoured lattes we did, I told him "we do vanilla, caramal, and hazelnut - but if your game we have an excellent coffee flavour" he said he'd give it a go, not realising I had actually made a joke, I handed him a regular latte, and he said it was the best he'd ever had... Still thinking I had put some magical syrup in there.
Brilliant! I've tried that before too, but it only works if the delivery is perfect. Any touch of sarcasm and it goes wrong in a hurry.
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