Italian Coffee Machines - Milk Workflow
All premium espresso machines can deliver powerful steam, so with a little guidance you will soon be making milky coffees to rival your local café.
The latté is the most popular espresso based milky coffee, followed closely by the flat white and the old school cappuccino. Steaming milk is easy. You just need a few tips and a little practice.
For a latté - follow my Milk Workflow
For flat white - follow my Milk Workflow but stop injecting air earlier
For a cappuccino - follow my Milk Workflow but inject more air and inject it for longer
Milk Workflow Steps
Add cold milk to a cold jug
Give the steam wand a quick squirt to remove residual water and get to dry steam.
Place the wand tip just below the milk surface and angle the wand so that you get a whirlpool during steaming.
Start steaming your milk.
From cold until lukewarm - have the tip close to the surface to allow a small amount of air to be injected into the milk whirlpool.
At lukewarm - dip the tip lower to stop any new air from being sucked into the milk.
From lukewarm to uncomfortable-to-touch - keep the tip below the top of the milk and keep the milk swirling to break down the air bubbles into smaller and smaller bubbles (micro-foam).
At uncomfortable-to-touch - stop steaming
Remove the steam wand, wipe the tip clean, then give the wand a quick squirt.
If you have perfect milk without large bubbles on top you can stop here. If you have large bubbles on top you can break them down by swirling the jug then tapping the jug down several times to pop them.
Swirl the espresso in the cup to spread the surface crema.
Angle your cup slightly.
Pour the milk.
Pour from up high into the deepest part of the cup to push the milk beneath the surface crema.
Towards the end of the pour, drop the jug down low and allow the micro-foam to flow across the surface.
The final step is to lift the jug up high again and cut through the centre. Lift evenly for a heart or give the jug a little wiggle as you lift to pour a a nice stripy pattern.
Enjoy your milky drink.
To practice the above without wasting milk I recommend adding a few drops of dish washing detergent to water. Steam this and you will get a good simulation of milk. Just don’t drink it unless you like soapy notes ;)
Getting great tasting milky coffees is easy but creating latté art is a different story. Latté art takes practice. It's tricky, but when you get the hang of it and pour your first heart you will be rapt.
Milk FAQs
I know the questions that come to mind for new home baristas, and if I get asked a question 3 times I write an FAQ. This has become a great way for me to share handy tips online. Scroll below to learn more.