Espresso & the
milk-drink map
The café menu looks like thirty drinks. It’s really espresso plus two variables: how much milk, and how much foam. Learn that and the board decodes itself.
The milk-drink family
Every drink below starts from the same espresso shot. Click through from least to most milk:
Rebuild the menu
Take a café menu
List its espresso drinks. For each, ask: how many shots, how much milk, how much foam?
Sort by milk
Order them from macchiato (least) to latte (most). The whole board should collapse into that one axis.
Questions
Flashcards
Lock it in
From memory:
- State the "one variable" behind the menu.
- Order macchiato, cortado, latte by milk.
- How does a flat white differ from a latte?
- What defines a classic cappuccino?
- Which drink is the mildest, and why?
Single-origin
vs blend
Not a quality ranking — a difference of purpose. One expresses a place; the other engineers a consistent, balanced profile. Knowing which you want is the skill.
Two different goals
The label tells you what the roaster was trying to do. Click through:
Match tool to task
For learning, single-origin
When you want to study origin/process, buy a single-origin — it expresses one thing clearly.
For a daily espresso, a blend
If you want a consistent, forgiving shot every morning, an espresso blend is engineered for exactly that.
Taste both critically
Note that "distinctive" and "balanced/consistent" are different virtues — neither is simply "better."
Questions
Flashcards
Lock it in
From memory:
- Define single-origin and blend.
- What is each built for?
- Why does espresso often favor blends?
- Which would you buy to learn origins?
- Why is neither strictly "better"?
Specialty
vs commodity
What "specialty" actually means, where the line sits, and why the grading system itself is changing right now. The story behind why your bag names a farm at all.
How coffee is graded
"Specialty" isn’t marketing — it’s (historically) a score. But the framework is actively being replaced. Click through:
The SCA’s Coffee Value Assessment (SCA-102/103/104) has been phased in since 2023 and updated in October 2025, superseding the 2004 cupping form and moving from a single 100-point score to a multi-part descriptive-plus-affective profile. The 80-point "specialty" reference still circulates, and many roasters now emphasise 84+. Because this is a live transition, treat any specific scoring claim as current-as-of-now — the durable takeaway is the direction: one number → a richer, multi-dimensional picture of value.
Read the tier of your coffee
Judge your bag
Does it name origin, farm, altitude, variety, process, and a roast date? The more of these, the more it behaves like specialty.
Spot commodity in disguise
A bag heavy on adjectives ("rich, smooth, gourmet") and light on those specifics is usually commodity coffee dressed up.
Questions
Flashcards
Lock it in
From memory:
- What score historically defined "specialty"?
- Contrast specialty and commodity coffee.
- What is the "third wave"?
- What is the CVA, and what does it replace?
- Why treat scoring claims as needing verification?