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  2. Scalded milk - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scalded_milk

    Café au lait [8] and baked milk use scalded milk, [9] ryazhenka uses baked milk. Scalded and cooled milk is used in many recipes for raised doughnuts, probably for the same reason it is so often specified in bread recipes. However, latte art does not use scalded milk, as scalding destroys the microfoam texture; milk for latte art is heated to ...

  3. Café au lait - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Café_au_lait

    Café au lait bowls in a style traditionally used in France. At home, café au lait can be prepared from dark coffee and heated milk; in cafés, it has been prepared on espresso machines from espresso and steamed milk ever since these machines became available in the 1940s—thus it merely refers to a "coffee and milk" mixture, depending on the location, not to a specific drink.

  4. Café con leche - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Café_con_leche

    Café au lait, caffè e latte Media: Café con leche Café con leche ( Spanish for 'coffee with milk') is a coffee beverage common throughout Spain and Latin America consisting of strong coffee (usually espresso ) mixed with scalded milk in approximately equal amounts.

  5. Latte - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Latte

    Preparation of caffè latte. A caffè latte consists of one or more shots of espresso, served in a glass (or sometimes a cup), into which hot steamed milk is added. [7] The difference between a caffè latte and a cappuccino is that the cappuccino is served in a small 140 mL (5 US fl oz) cup with a layer of thick foam on top of the milk, and a caffè latte is served in a larger 230 mL (8 US fl ...

  6. Cortado - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cortado

    A flat white is generally made with a similar equivalent ratio of espresso to milk, but uses steamed and textured (e.g. microfoam) milk, resulting in a hotter and lighter drink, more closely related to a caffè latte. [4] A similar drink in Australia is known as a piccolo latte, or simply a piccolo. [6]

  7. To put that in perspective, a grande latte from Starbucks in made with 12 oz of milk. Upping that intake to 600 ml (20.29 oz) had a 12% increase in risk, while downing 800 ml (27.05 oz) had a 21% ...

  8. Scalding - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scalding

    In cooking, milk is typically scalded to increase its temperature, or to change the consistency or other cooking interactions due to the denaturing of proteins. Recipes that call for scalded milk include café au lait, baked milk, and ryazhenka.

  9. Microfoam - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microfoam

    If milk is heated above 82 °C (180 °F), it becomes scalded and its texture is compromised. Microfoam cannot exist in overheated milk due to the missing tertiary structure in the protein. [18] When milk is scalded, the suspended protein casein becomes denatured and cannot maintain the intermolecular bonds necessary for microfoam. [19]