257 lines
19 KiB
Plaintext
257 lines
19 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 338
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Title: HPR0338: cappuccino
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr0338/hpr0338.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-07 16:41:24
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---
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Is this possible?
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Yes.
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Hi everyone, welcome to Hacker Public Radio.
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My name is Klaatu and today I'm going to talk about how to make the perfect cappuccino.
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This is my second episode on coffee and the first one was about roasting beans and things
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like that.
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I'm taking it a step further and we're actually going to make a really, really good cappuccino.
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So first of all, there are a couple of things that you're going to need before we get started.
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One is going to be a cappuccino maker.
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So briefly on how to find a good cappuccino maker.
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Go to your local department store and look in the coffee department, the appliances, look
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around the cappuccino maker.
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Things to look out for are number one is simplicity.
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Simple is good.
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It does not that complex to make a cappuccino.
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You just need something to produce steam and some way to get that steam through ground
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coffee or into a cup of milk so that you can then steam the milk.
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If you are getting, if the cappuccino maker has much more than that and you're probably
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getting something that is overly complex and probably overpriced, so just watch out for
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that.
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It doesn't need to be this huge monstrous beast.
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It can be a fairly small thing, like I say, it just needs those two components and it's
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pretty much good to go.
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I have one that was given to me.
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It happens to be a mystic coffee, so it's nothing fancy and it's pretty good for what
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it is.
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It was probably pretty cheap, I imagine.
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There are a couple of downsides to it, so these are things to look out for.
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When you're steaming milk, I like to have a lot of control over the steam.
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This unit that I have right here is just basically it's on and off switch and you don't really
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have a whole lot of control over the steam.
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It's also the coordination is a little bit difficult for this switch because if you move
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the switch one way, then it goes steaming milk.
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If you move it in another way, it goes through the coffee and so far there have been a couple
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of times where I'm steaming milk and I want to turn the steam off for a moment and I actually
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at least switch it too far and it starts making coffee and that kind of messes you up.
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Watch out for that.
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There's also on this unit a little drip catcher so that if coffee or some water drips,
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it goes into this little tray, which you'd think seems like a good idea, but unfortunately
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this tray is so cheap and so badly put together that when you go to empty it, all the stuff
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that's in the tray starts dripping out before you even get over to the sink, so watch
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out for something that's too cheap I guess, but don't go for anything overly complex.
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So there you go.
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That's a cappuccino machine.
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The cappuccino machine itself has really two external components.
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There's the basket for the coffee, which is generally a small metal, looks like a metal
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dripper with a handle and then a small metal filter that goes into that.
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You don't have to buy coffee filters for these things, you just put the coffee straight
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into this metal filter and place it into the coffee machine, into the cappuccino machine.
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We'll get to that in a moment and then there's the coffee, the actual coffee pot itself,
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which generally goes up to about four cups so that would be four shots of espresso.
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They generally are numbered two and four, so I usually make double shot cappuccinos for
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me and usually a friend, so I'm usually always using it for four cups and I think you're
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if I'm going to go to the trouble of making a cappuccino, I might as well make a lot.
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So there's a cappuccino machine.
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But you're also going to need some good coffee, just like I said in my first coffee episode
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I think is that the quality of your cup is going to depend on the quality of your coffee
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that you've used to produce a cup of coffee.
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Starbucks coffee is to be avoided.
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They generally speaking sell, well to me, overly roasted coffees, they're usually really
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not very good, just as a drip cup, much less when you pack it into a cappuccino machine
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and force them through it, it just produces an unpleasant cup of coffee, especially avoid
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in my opinion again, the quote unquote espresso roasts.
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These are just really, really dark roasted coffees, designed as far as I can tell, they're
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designed to taste more like espresso through a regular drip or they're not, if you're
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making an espresso, you do not need an espresso roast bean.
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Just get some good coffee that you like, that way you can make it as a good drip cup or
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you can make it, you know, a good cappuccino, it will taste great as an espresso, does not
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need to be especially roasted in some particular way.
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These are all my opinions and if you're just really, really ended really crazy dark burnt
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coffee, go for it.
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But brands that I will sometimes let me look in the freezer here, I've got, I've got
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one called Blue Grove Collection, I've got one called Magnum Exotics, I've got Gavalia
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and that's about it.
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Kona is what I've been into a lot lately, so if you look out for Kona, that will, that
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will make a really good cup of coffee, now again having said that, Kona blend from your
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local grocery stores, probably not going to be that good, you're probably going to seek
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out a good quality Kona blend because, you know, your local grocery stores, those containers
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that they've got where you can kind of dump out your own beans that have been sitting
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there for like six months and you grind them up and you feel all professional and like
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an exotic coffee, aficionato, those typically are just not going to taste very good, they're
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usually blended with a really low quality coffee.
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So find a good coffee.
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To get started on the cappuccino itself, we need to first, we should first steam the milk.
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I do this first simply because that way you can do that and you can be cleaning it while
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the machine is depressurizing and then you can continue to the next step which is making
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the coffee.
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It doesn't really technically matter, you could make the coffee first and set that aside
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and then do your steam to milk.
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I've done it both ways, it's just lately I've been doing the milk first.
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So the thing you need to do for that is to get two cups or however many cappuccinos
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you're making and get out some milk and some half and half.
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You need half and half here, you can try to use 2% milk or something like that but it's
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not going to froth correctly, I think you'll find, half and half has the right amount
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of fat and cream or whatever to really froth correctly.
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So what I do is usually use a mixture of 2% and half and half because the half and half
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is just too expensive for me to get and use just half and half.
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I drink enough coffee and cappuccino to make that really an expensive venture so what I try
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to do is I'll use 2% plus some of my friends don't really like to have just pure half
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and half with all their drinks.
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So I'll use about maybe 3 to 1 mixture of half and half to 2% milk and the amount that
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you put into it, the amount of milk that you put into the cup obviously just depends
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on how far you want to stretch the cappuccino, the actual coffee, how creamy you want the
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cappuccino versus how coffee like or how espresso like.
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Obviously if you have a lot of milk, a lot of cream and stuff then it's going to be a
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creamier cappuccino.
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If you have less milk and more coffee it's going to be more like an espresso with frothed
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milk on top.
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So it's really up to you as to which one you prefer and if you don't know which you prefer
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you'll just have to do it both ways and experiment and find out what you like best.
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So I usually do let's say a 3 to 1 mixture.
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So I like 3 tablespoons of 2% milk and 1 tablespoon of half and half.
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And now we've got 4 tablespoons of milk and we need to put the water that we'll use
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for the steam in the cappuccino machine and for that there's usually some kind of
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indication on the cappuccino machine as to how much milk you should put in if you're
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just steaming milk.
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You can also on some cappuccino machines they'll have you dump everything in all at once
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and you just kind of have to steam your milk and kind of when that's finished then you
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switch it over to the coffee making portion and it redirects the steam to your coffee.
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So it just depends on what your coffee maker does.
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This one is fairly dedicated to there's the steam part and there's the coffee part and
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I don't know.
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I mean I guess I could do it all at once but I prefer to do them separately so I'm going
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to put about, probably about 4 tablespoons of water into the cappuccino machine and
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turn it on to steam.
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So now it's going to build up, you know it's got to boil the water and start it steaming
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which is a pretty quick process and once the steam is flowing we start steaming the milk
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and this is actually the hardest part of making a cappuccino.
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Getting the milk just right, getting it to froth correctly, getting it just so that's
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the hard part and there is a secret to this that you will now learn from me.
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Essentially the idea is to get the milk, the body of the milk, you want to raise the
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temperature of that.
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A lot of people think that in order to froth it you just need to start at the top and
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kind of barely to merge the milk into the steam nozzle so that the steam just kind of
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causes the milk to froth and that will cause bubbles but that's not going to cause a proper
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froth.
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So what you do is fully submerge the steam nozzle in the milk.
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So really push that milk, the cup with milk, the cups with milk one at a time obviously
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up so that the nozzle is almost touching the bottom of the mug which is one reason you're
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not going to be able to use very tall mugs for this.
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You want to depending on your cappuccino machine but usually they don't really allow for
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very tall mugs.
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A lot of times the shorter the mug the better.
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So you're going to want to submerge that nozzle as much as possible and really start just
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heating the base of the milk just for the bottom up basically.
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Keep it moving.
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You want to get all that milk just the whole temperature you want to get up there and
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you'll actually feel it through the mug.
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If you've got just a normal ceramic mug you'll feel the heat once the milk starts getting
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really hot you'll feel that at the base of the mug if you put your hand on it carefully
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because it is hot.
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And then as once you feel it's getting hot then you can lower the mugs so that the
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steam nozzle goes towards the surface of the milk.
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And you want that nozzle right underneath the surface of the milk.
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You don't want it to go above the surface or else it will spray milk everywhere.
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You want it right below the surface and the sound the pitch of the steam will change
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and you'll really kind of get a feel for this if you practice enough that you want it
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just underneath the surface of the milk so that starts actually boiling and causing
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it to cause the skin to form over the milk but instead when you boil milk on the stove
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the skin just kind of forms over the surface but since we're doing it with forced steam
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it's causing the milk to bubble and causing it to skin at the same time and so that creates
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the froth.
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This is something that's obviously going to happen after practice you're going to need
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to get the technique down eventually but that's how you start by heating up the body
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of the milk and then raising the nozzle so that it's just underneath the surface of the
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milk and you'll get the feel of it it's a combination of the feel and the sound and
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you'll feel the milk starting to boil and you'll hear the froth start to form and just
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keep that nozzle right underneath the surface of the milk and you'll get it and then I keep
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moving it around after that to just to kind of really let that milk get hot and then
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just keep it keep the temperature up and keep it frothing and once it's hot enough
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it will almost start to froth itself you'll still have to get it under the surface of the
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milk but it does it pretty easily once the whole of the milk is hot most people's mistakes
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is that they don't get the body of the milk hot enough before they start to trying to form
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a froth so that's how you do that keep in mind too that this is steam and if you've never
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been burned by steam you've never been burned there's nothing quite like a steam burn so be
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very careful do not get near the forced steam out of this nozzle it will hurt if you get burned by
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it once all your milk is frothed and you only need to do this as many times as you have you know
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as many cappuccinos you're making once that's finished you can then depressurize the machine all
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told usually it takes about 90 seconds to steam one cup of milk that's just what I've kind of
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found rough estimate it generally takes about 90 seconds could be more to be left depending on
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how much milk you've got and beside you know the different proportions of your mug and things
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like that but that's generally what it takes me is 90 seconds per cup and you'd be amazed at how
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far the the water that you filled into the cappuccino machine lasts just four tablespoons or so
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will will steam two or three cups of milk very very well now when you take the steam when you take
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the milk out of the steam make sure that the steam is off because otherwise again it will splatter
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milk everywhere because it's just air being forced onto a surface of liquid so turn that off first
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take it off and then do the next cup once you're finished steaming it all you want to make sure
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that you depressurize your cappuccino machine because if you don't when you try to open the lid
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to pour more water in to make coffee you will be met with all kinds of steam and perhaps
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a minor explosion of some sort so make sure that that is that that's all depressurized and the
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way to do that is either just leave the steam running and that's what I usually do for a little
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while and then I and then I clean off a nozzle because after you've steamed a couple of cups of milk
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molding one some of that froth will will stay on the nozzle so you'll need to clean that off so I
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just use a kitchen sponge and clean that off I shouldn't really be cleaning it off while it's
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steaming always depressurizing but because I'm experienced I do that anyway but I wouldn't do it
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how far are you not not at first anyway once that's cleaned then you can either keep letting it
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just blow off the steam or if you want as long as you don't have any coffee in the gasket yet
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you can redirect that steam through the coffee portion and that's going to be a lot of steam
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and then some hot water and stuff like that so you really need to be careful when you do that
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either have a good good mechanism for catching all that like a kitchen towel or some kind of
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container or just don't do it just let it steam off through the nozzle through the milk steam
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the milk steamer either way once it's depressurized then it's safe to open the coffee machine
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open that up first we'll fill this gasket up with coffee and we'll fill up the coffee pot with
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water I'm going to do the full four cups so I can get two cups of two cups of two shot cappuccinos
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of this and pour the water in the cappuccino maker make sure that the coffee is twisted in tight
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usually it's a matter of putting the coffee holder into the machine and then twisting it to the right
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so it's just like a give it a good give it a good turn to wherever it tells you to stop
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just do it all the way to the end and that's obviously I mean like I say this is a pressure
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system so you need to make sure that all the parts are secure you know you want to screw the top
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back on the the coffee maker securely you want to screw that make sure that the coffee container is
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completely in in its little place so once you start building up this pressure in the in the
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machine things don't pop off or fly out go everywhere and burn you and make a big mess so then
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you turn on the coffee machine and you wait and what it'll do it'll boil all that water and it will
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force steam through the coffee beans now and this is what makes a really really concentrated
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sort of pure essence of coffee espresso and you'll kind of know when it's finished I mean
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it kind of depressurizes itself at this point because you're just letting it run till it's finished
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but sometimes I'll I'll turn the knob just to make sure all the pressures out
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and redirect the steam through the nozzle just to make sure it's really really depressurized and
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once it's depressurized then you can take the coffee pot pour half into one cup and be sure you
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want to pour in a straight stream you don't want to pour all around or else you'll dissolve all
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your froth because there's one steady small stream and then into the next cup and then for
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presentation purposes because we all know that everything tastes better when it's presented
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properly and nicely I take a knife just a butter knife or a spoon or whatever and I kind of
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give the froth a twirl around because now there's this coffee stain in the froth that we don't want
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to really be very obvious so just kind of give it a nice swirl maybe make a devian logo in the
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top of the froth you know whatever you want to do and then if you want to garnish it which I
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usually like to do because it does look nice that way I'm generally speaking I'll put like maybe
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some some powdered cinnamon ground cinnamon on there just for looks really or if you have flakes
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of chocolate or if you can have a chocolate bar hanging around somewhere a chocolate chip even
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just get grab a kitchen knife and you can kind of kind of scrape off little shards of chocolate
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don't make them too heavy because then they'll sink to the bottom of the cup so just kind of
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it's kind of shaped it's just chocolate shavings is all you need or if you want to do the whole
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sprinkles thing you know if it's Easter and you want to do something extra colorful you could get
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those cake sprinkles and sprinkle that on top you know whatever you think the person you're serving
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this to is going to appreciate most I generally stick with ground cinnamon or chocolate because
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those are tasty and more or less natural so that's what I use and that's it now you're finished
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one thing you'll want to do before you really sit down to enjoy it probably because it'll stay hot
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for a while is clean out the you want to clean the grounds out of the coffee basket
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which is pretty tight in there right now there okay and the way that I do that is you hold it
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over a trash can you would use that same butter knife or spoon that you just twirled the
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froth with to dig out the coffee because it's going to be really really packed in there tight
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be amazed at how tight it gets packed in there after all that steam is forced through it and then
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just rinse out the coffee pot itself and that's about it that's how to make a really really good
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cappuccino and impress your friends and once you've started making really good cappuccinos
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you will you will not want to have cappuccino elsewhere you will be amazed at how
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how unappealing in a cappuccino now from you know some Starbucks or from your local cafe
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will will seem because once you get good at it you can make a mean cappuccino for yourself exactly
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how you want it so it's really really good so give it a shot try it out thank you for listening
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to H.P.R. sponsored by caro.net so head on over to C.A.R.O.E.C. for all of her singing
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