About Home Latte Lab
Learn about Home Latte Lab's mission to bring a methodical, experiment-driven approach to understanding latte art at home.
Read more →Most latte art guidance follows a familiar pattern: watch a demonstration, attempt to replicate it, repeat until the results improve. This process works — eventually — but it leaves a significant number of variables unexamined. When a pour fails, the cause could be milk temperature, microfoam density (the proportion of tiny, uniformly sized bubbles suspended in steamed milk), pitcher height, flow rate, espresso crema thickness, or several of these factors acting in combination. Without isolating variables, it is difficult to know which adjustment actually produced the improvement.
Home Latte Lab takes a different path. Each article on this site frames a specific, testable hypothesis — something like “Reducing milk temperature at the end of steaming by 5 °C will increase contrast definition in a rosetta” — and then walks through an observable comparison, holding other variables as constant as practical in a home kitchen setting. The findings are reported with measurements (typically taken with an instant-read thermometer, a kitchen scale, and a stopwatch) and accompanied by photographs taken under consistent lighting.
The result is not a set of rigid rules but rather a body of observations that any home barista can replicate, challenge, or extend.

The site is organised around the primary variables that influence latte art outcomes. Each section isolates a different category of influence:
Each experiment page follows a consistent structure: a stated hypothesis, a description of the equipment and conditions used (including ambient temperature, which matters more than many guides acknowledge — particularly for microfoam stability), the procedure, and a summary of observations. Where possible, trials were repeated three to five times to check for consistency, and notable outliers are flagged rather than discarded.
It is worth noting that home espresso setups vary considerably in boiler size, steam wand design, and pressure stability. The specific numerical results reported here may not transfer exactly to a different machine, but the directional trends — when X is increased, Y tends to shift in this direction — should hold across most single-boiler and heat-exchange home machines.
Readers new to this approach may find the beginner’s guide a useful starting point; it covers the minimum equipment needed and suggests a sequence for working through the experiments. The glossary defines terminology used throughout the site (terms like microfoam density, free pour, and contrast ratio), and the equipment reference catalogues the tools mentioned in each experiment without endorsing any single product. The FAQ addresses common questions about methodology and reproducibility.
The underlying premise is straightforward: latte art improves faster when you understand why a technique works, not just how to perform it. These experiments are an attempt to build that understanding, one controlled variable at a time.
Learn about Home Latte Lab's mission to bring a methodical, experiment-driven approach to understanding latte art at home.
Read more →Controlled comparisons of whole, skim, oat, soy, and almond milk to measure foam quality, texture, and latte art performance.
Read more →Discover how milk temperature and steam pressure settings affect microfoam density, sweetness, and pour control in latte art.
Read more →Systematic tests on pour height, speed, pitcher angle, and flow rate to isolate what creates clean latte art patterns.
Read more →How espresso dose, grind size, and crema thickness influence the canvas for latte art, tested with measurable variables.
Read more →A step-by-step guide for home baristas who want to learn latte art through structured experiments and repeatable methods.
Read more →An unbiased reference guide to steam wands, pitchers, thermometers, and other tools used in home latte art experiments.
Read more →Definitions of key terms like microfoam, free pour, protein denaturation, and other concepts used across our experiments.
Read more →Answers to common questions about latte art science, milk steaming variables, experiment methodology, and home barista techniques.
Read more →