Rocket Espresso milk jug, copper, 350 ml
Rocket Espresso milk jug, copper, 350 ml
With the elegant milk frother from the Italian brand Rocket Espresso, you will always prepare perfect latte art. Moreover, with its stylish design in copper, it will fit into any barista's corner. Capacity 350 ml. More
Product code: 5641 Shipping and payment
With the elegant milk frother from the Italian brand Rocket Espresso, you will always prepare perfect latte art. Moreover, with its stylish design in copper, it will fit into any barista's corner. Capacity 350 ml. More
Product code: 5641 Shipping and payment
Copper jug for whipping milk - 350 ml
- ✔️ stylish milk whisking jug
- ✔️ elegant copper design
- ✔️ for precision latte art
- ✔️ made of high quality stainless steel
- ✔️ handle ensures a comfortable grip
- ✔️ capacity 350 ml
Perfect latte art with the Rocket Espresso pot
The stylish black teapot from Rocket Espresso will help you whip up perfectly smooth milk foam. It makes creating latte art even easier and more precise.
The shape of the teapot's body is perfectly adapted to support the correct whisking technique. The handle, in turn, ensures a comfortable grip and easy handling.
In addition, thesleek copper design will fit into any café and your barista won't want to let go of it.
Colour | |
---|---|
Material | Stainless steel |
Volume | 350 ml |
Height (cm) | 9 |
Colour | |
---|---|
Material | Stainless steel |
Volume | 350 ml |
Height (cm) | 9 |
Latte art and milk jugs. Which one do you find best to draw with?
Whisk - pour - draw. Three steps to latte art coffee. If it were that simple, every milky coffee would have a beautiful van Gogh painting on the surface. Pouring milk when it goes wrong can be a pain in the ass for a barista. How do you minimize accidents and make accidents a certainty?
There are teapots in the world, small and large, shaped in all sorts of materials and from a multitude of manufacturers. Is there one among them that will help you achieve your dream latte art motifs?
Get inspired and try new Latte Art themes
Latte Art is a unique art in the world of baristas, which is always up to date and goes through one innovative phase after another. Coffee paintings provide baristas with a platform to express their creativity. Get inspired with me on the best Latte Art.
6 reasons why latte art is not working for you
Coffee without a picture can taste great. But when we focus on cappuccino or latte, we can almost say that you can't imagine a good cappuccino without a nice latte art. In fact, properly whipped milk for latte art also has an effect on the taste. If you're trying to create a tulip or swan in your cappuccino but still can't get it right, you may be making one of the following mistakes. So let's fix it.
Latte art: How to make a caffe latte with rosetta
Petals, feathers or ferns. This is how you can imagine a rosetta. I'm sure you know this picture. You might have seen it most often at Cafe Latte. The latte art in the shape of a rosetta is typical of this coffee. So let's create one together.
How to make latte art: swans and other animals
Cappuccino with swan. This is a common goal of aspiring baristas who want to learn the latte art technique. The skill to draw a swan motif in the coffee is considered as a kind of meta. A kind of confirmation of the barista's level, skill and ability. So how do you draw a latte art swan?
Latte art guide
You've probably noticed that many baristas, after filling a cup, spend some time concentrating on the surface of the drink and then hand you a coffee with a distinctive picture. It's actually his artistic signature - a brand, or it can be a message, because even though he creates images according to established rules, there are no limits to imagination and every shape will turn out differently. It depends on the mood of the barista and his skill. It can be hilarious, haphazard, smooth or blocky, with curls or subtly simple.
Italy is said to be the cradle of European latte art. The pioneer of latte art in the USA was David Schomer, who created his first rosetta in Seattle in 1989. He also invented the microfoam (milk emulsion) three years earlier, allowing latte art to flourish.
Oat milk in coffee - what is it better in and how to use it
A few years ago, you would have been hard pressed to find any alternative to cow's milk in cafes. Fortunately, times have moved on and not only to the delight of vegans and lactose-intolerant people, plant milks are in almost every café.