Latte Art for Beginners: How to Pour a Rosetta and Heart at Home

A cup of coffee with latte art in the form of a rosetta leaf pattern, formed by skilled milk pouring technique using textured microfoam milk poured through an espresso crema to create the white-on-brown contrast that defines free-pour latte art
Free-pour latte art is created by tilting the cup and pouring textured microfoam milk from a height to sink through the espresso crema, then bringing the pitcher to the surface of the liquid and using a controlled side-to-side or circular motion to place the foam pattern. The contrast comes from the white foam sitting on top of the brown crema layer. (CC / Wikimedia Commons)

Latte art is the result of two separate skills executed in sequence: steaming milk to the correct microfoam texture, and pouring that milk through the crema layer in a controlled pattern. Both skills require practice, but the first (milk steaming) is by far the more important: perfectly poured milk into a cup will produce excellent latte art; imperfectly textured milk poured by a world barista champion will not. Most beginners focus on the pouring and neglect the steaming, which reverses the correct order of attention. Spend 80% of your practice time on milk texture before working on pour technique.

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What You Need

  • An espresso machine with a steam wand (not a pressurised steam wand that produces dry foam; requires a genuine steam wand with sufficient pressure to texture milk properly)
  • A stainless steel milk pitcher (350ml for a single latte; 600ml for two drinks or a larger drink). The shape matters: a pitcher with a pointed spout (like the Motta Europa, approximately £15 to £20) gives more pouring control than a wide-spout pitcher.
  • Whole milk: the highest-fat option available. Full-fat dairy milk produces the most stable, sweetest microfoam. Oat milk (specifically barista formulations: Oatly Barista, Minor Figures, Califia Barista Blend) is the best non-dairy alternative for latte art; it froths more stably than regular oat milk or almond milk due to added oils and stabilisers.
  • A thermometer (optional but recommended for beginners; target temperature: 60 to 65°C)

Part 1: Steaming Milk to Microfoam

"Microfoam" is the term for milk that has been textured to a glossy, paint-like consistency with bubbles so small they are invisible to the naked eye. The process:

Step 1: Prepare the Steam Wand

Before placing the wand in the milk, purge it for 1 to 2 seconds (open the steam valve briefly with no pitcher in place) to expel any condensed water from the wand tip. Water in the milk dilutes the flavour and disrupts the foam formation. Wipe the wand with a damp cloth.

Step 2: Fill the Pitcher Correctly

Fill the pitcher to just below the bottom of the spout: approximately one-third full for a single flat white or latte; half full for a larger drink. Less milk than this is difficult to texture evenly; more milk leaves no room for the foam volume increase during steaming.

Step 3: Position the Steam Wand

Tilt the pitcher at approximately 30 to 45 degrees and position the steam wand tip just below the surface of the milk, slightly off-centre (not at the exact centre of the pitcher, which produces chaotic bubbling). The precise position: the wand tip should be about 1cm below the milk surface and about 1cm from the pitcher wall.

Step 4: Introduce Air (the "Stretching" Phase)

Open the steam valve fully. For the first 2 to 4 seconds, hold the wand at the position described above: you should hear a gentle "sissing" or "chirping" sound as small amounts of air are incorporated into the milk surface. This is "stretching" the milk (adding volume). Too much air injection = large bubbles (foam, not microfoam); too little = no increase in volume. Raise the pitcher slightly if the sound becomes too loud and bubbly; lower it if there is no sound and no air incorporation.

Step 5: Texturing Phase

After 2 to 4 seconds of stretching, lower the pitcher slightly to submerge the wand tip completely. The steam should now create a spinning vortex in the milk (visible from the side of the pitcher). This spinning action breaks large bubbles into smaller ones and integrates the foam with the milk. Continue until the pitcher becomes hot to the touch (approximately 60 to 65°C; about 25 to 35 seconds total steaming time for 200ml of milk).

Step 6: Tap and Swirl

Immediately after steaming, tap the pitcher firmly on the counter twice to break any remaining large bubbles visible on the surface, then swirl vigorously in a circular motion. The milk should have a glossy, paint-like appearance with no visible bubbles. If large bubbles remain visible, the milk is too foamy and will not pour latte art cleanly.

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Part 2: Pouring Latte Art

Begin pouring while the espresso is freshly pulled and the crema is intact. Pour within 60 seconds of pulling the shot.

The Heart: The Fundamental Pattern

  1. Tilt the cup toward you at approximately 45 degrees
  2. Start pouring from a height of about 10cm, aiming for the back edge of the cup. This sinks the milk under the crema and warms the cup floor without placing foam on the surface yet.
  3. When the cup is approximately half full, lower the pitcher spout to just above the surface (1 to 2cm) and aim toward the near edge of the cup. The foam should now float on the crema surface, creating a white dot.
  4. Gently move the pitcher side to side (1 to 2cm each way) while continuing to pour, building a white circle on the surface.
  5. When the cup is 80% full, lift the pitcher slightly and pour a thin stream through the middle of the white circle, toward yourself. This "cuts" the circle into the heart shape.

The heart is the foundational pattern; the tulip (multiple pours creating concentric circles) and rosetta (leaf pattern using a side-to-side wiggle with a cutting motion) build on the same mechanics.

Common Mistakes and How to Fix Them

  • Bubbles on the milk surface after steaming: Tap and swirl more vigorously; allow milk to rest 5 more seconds before pouring
  • Milk sinks through the crema rather than floating: Milk is too liquid (insufficient foam); either more stretching is needed or the milk temperature went too high (above 68°C) and destroyed foam stability
  • Pattern disappears immediately: Milk is too hot; the foam-crema interface breaks down quickly at high temperatures. Aim for 60 to 65°C
  • Large white blob but no defined pattern: Pour rate too fast; slow down the pour rate during the surface placement phase
  • Brown showing through the white pattern: Not enough foam; more stretching needed in steaming

Related: Types of Coffee Drinks: The Complete Visual Guide | Espresso Machines Over £500: Professional Results at Home

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