Check out the video segment that Patch.com did after the writer, Ashley, came in for a lunch and loved the latte art she and her group got in their coffee drinks!
Showing posts with label Videos. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Videos. Show all posts
Saturday, May 21, 2011
Video on Patch.com
Labels:
Almost Famous,
Bear,
Patch.com,
Tulips,
Videos
Tuesday, May 10, 2011
How-To Tuesdays: Daisy - Video
It's been a while since I did a How-To Tuesday. This one comes at the request of Angelica, who also wanted to see Pikachu in a latte.
To etch a daisy:
To etch a daisy:
- Pour a two-tiered tulip, but don't finish off the second layer.
- Take an etching tool (aka thermometer) and first pull down a stem.
- Pull in sections of the second layer to create the daisy petals.
- Pick up some brown crema and make the center of the daisy.
Labels:
Daisy,
How-To Tuesdays,
Videos
Tuesday, March 1, 2011
How-To Tuesdays: Finishing off a rosetta with a heart
Okay, for this How-To Tuesday, we're comparing two different pours of rosettas. The first is finished off with a rounded heart-shape top and the second isn't.
What's the difference?
Look at Example B. At around 0:11, you can see a heart shape form at the top of the rosetta, but then I raise the spout of the pitcher away from the surface and bury whatever nice heart would have been there, resulting in a spindly top.
In Example A, at around 0:12 as the rosetta is finished off, I keep the spout of the pitcher close to the surface, letting foam release onto the drink without having the flow of the milk sink it down beneath the top layer.
With practice, you can get a heart on the top of every rosetta your pour (if that's actually the look you want to go for). Cheers!
Example A:
Example B:
What's the difference?
Look at Example B. At around 0:11, you can see a heart shape form at the top of the rosetta, but then I raise the spout of the pitcher away from the surface and bury whatever nice heart would have been there, resulting in a spindly top.
In Example A, at around 0:12 as the rosetta is finished off, I keep the spout of the pitcher close to the surface, letting foam release onto the drink without having the flow of the milk sink it down beneath the top layer.
With practice, you can get a heart on the top of every rosetta your pour (if that's actually the look you want to go for). Cheers!
Labels:
How-To Tuesdays,
Rosettas,
Videos
Tuesday, February 22, 2011
How-To Tuesdays: Wave Heart - Video
This week's How-To is the "Wave Heart". I honestly haven't yet perfected this design (just like my attempts at all other latte art designs), but I thought I got the basics down enough to throw up a video and step-by-step:
Enjoy wave heart making!
- Start just like you would any other design... start filling the coffee cup up nicely and preserve the crema canvas.
- Start pouring off to one side of the cup (left or right, doesn't matter) and you will see the liquid in the cup start to swirl in one direction. (It is also an option to pre-rotate your wrist before pouring so that you can rotate the cup while drawing the wave, making the wave wrap around almost the entire cup.)
- Move the tip of the pitcher closer to the surface and increase the pour speed as you start drawing the beginnings of a rosetta. This is the "wave", which is really just an unfinished rosetta. The wave should wrap around the cup, being affected by how early or late you start drawing and also how fast your pour speed and swirling action is.
- As you finish up the wave - without pinching off the pour - move back toward the middle and draw a heart.
Enjoy wave heart making!
Labels:
Hearts,
How-To Tuesdays,
Videos,
Wave Heart
Friday, February 18, 2011
Rosetta - Video
Here's a video and picture of a rosetta to finish off the week!
And no video with this one, but I really like this rosetta I poured a couple days ago:
And no video with this one, but I really like this rosetta I poured a couple days ago:
Tuesday, February 15, 2011
How-To Tuesdays: The Ring - Video
Occasionally I luck out and end up with a neat little ring that frames a latte art design pretty nicely. I haven't really worked on controlling it to do it every time, but I've seen it in other people's pours enough that I know I want to do it consistently well.
After a little trial and error, it looks like these are the key things to do:
After a little trial and error, it looks like these are the key things to do:
- Start filling the cup slowly without disturbing the crema, leaving a nice dark background to pour into.
- When you start getting close and releasing foam, make it a point to have the first layer of white be well-defined and not a fuzzy cloud. For me, this means deliberate rocking/shaking at the right time to release the foam, and not doing it too early. Pinch off the pour like you're doing a tulip.
- For the next part, it probably doesn't really matter if you want to end up with a tulip or rosetta or heart, but the big key is to push that second layer into the first, through a combination of pouring slightly faster and moving the pour forward while leveling out the cup. That will insure that the second layer rests more or less inside of the first, with the first thinning out and becoming an outer ring.
- Finish off the design as a tulip or whatever you choose.
Labels:
How-To Tuesdays,
Tulips,
Videos
Tuesday, January 25, 2011
How-To Tuesdays: The Bear - Video
Here's a video of me pouring and etching The Bear design. I already gave a step-by-step description of how to do the design in a previous post.
Update (2/8/2011): I've started to put dark dots in the eyes of the bears I etch. So much more personality now! Here's the new video, with a slightly better angle to see the etching as well...
Labels:
Animals,
Bear,
How-To Tuesdays,
Videos
Tuesday, January 18, 2011
How-To Tuesdays: Tulip - Video
I've decided to kick off a weekly feature: "How-To Tuesdays". I'll give a more in-depth look at a specific latte art design each week, hopefully including a video with the post. Feel free to comment and ask questions if you need clarification.
This week it's a tulip pour. This particular tulip isn't that bad, though I like it when the outer ring is more defined than the one here.
My personal opinion on what makes a good tulip:
This week it's a tulip pour. This particular tulip isn't that bad, though I like it when the outer ring is more defined than the one here.
My personal opinion on what makes a good tulip:
- A good handle on how to "release" the foam into the cup right when you want to.
- Finishing each layer off with a slight push, but not fully pulling through like you're finishing off a heart or rosetta.
- Dropping each new layer into undisturbed crema for maximum contrast.
- "Pushing" each layer into the previous one while leveling the cup at the same time, to make the layers rest nicely within each other.
- A nice heart to finish it off.
- All the other basics of good milk, contrast, symmetry, etc.
Labels:
How-To Tuesdays,
Tulips,
Videos
Saturday, January 15, 2011
Double Rosetta - Video
Here's the first latte art video: a double rosetta. It's not the best one I've ever done, but at least you can tell it's two rosettas. The milk was maybe a touch thin, and my rosetta-making is still erratic, so the leaves are quite thin and wispy.
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