Variations of the drink involve the use ofcream instead of milk, using non-dairy milk substitutes and flavoring withcocoa powder (in Europe and Australasia) orcinnamon (in the United States and South Korea).[3][4] It is typically smaller in volume than that of acaffè latte, and topped with a thick layer of foam rather than being made with microfoam.[5]
The name comes from theCapuchin friars, referring to the color of theirhabits,[6] and in this context, referring to the color of the beverage when milk is added in small portion to dark, brewed coffee[7] (today mostly espresso). The physical appearance of a modern cappuccino with espresso crema and steamed milk is a result of a long evolution of the drink.
TheViennese bestowed the nameKapuziner, possibly in the 18th century, on an early version that included whipped cream and spices. Later, theKapuziner was introduced innorthern Italy during the period ofAustrian domination, and Italians started to use it for the beverage as well as the friar dress.[8] It is sometimes said to have been served in thecoffeehouses ofTrieste and other Italian areas of theAustro-Hungarian Empire in the early 20th century, spreading throughout theKingdom of Italy afterWorld War I. However, the existence incentral Italy of a coffee drink mixed with milk namedcappuccino is already documented in the 19th century.[9]
A cappuccino is a coffee drink that today is typically composed of a single, double, or triple espresso shot and hot milk, with the surface topped with foamed milk.[3] Cappuccinos are most often prepared with anespresso machine. The espresso is poured into the bottom of the cup, followed by a similar amount of hot milk which is prepared by heating and texturing the milk using the espresso machine steam wand. The top third of the drink consists of milk foam which is also made using the steam wand. The drink may then be topped with powdered chocolate orcocoa powder.[citation needed]
In a traditional cappuccino, as served in Europe andartisan coffeehouses in the United States, the total of espresso and milk/foam make up between approximately 150 and 180 ml (5 and 6 imp fl oz; 5 and 6 US fl oz). Commercial coffee restaurant chains in the US more often serve the cappuccino as a 360 ml (13 imp fl oz; 12 US fl oz) drink or larger. In Italy, a cappuccino consists of 25 ml (1 imp fl oz; 1 US fl oz) of espresso; the rest of the cup is filled with equal parts of milk and foam.[10][11]
A cappuccino is traditionally served in a small cup with a handle (180 ml maximum) with a thick layer of foam, while a caffè latte is espresso and milk (200–300 ml), with the milk steamed to be hot and to form microfoam, and is usually served in a large glass.
TheWorld Barista Championships have been arranged annually since 2000, and during the course of the competition, the competing barista must produce—for four sensory judges—among other drinks four cappuccinos, defined in WBC Rules and Regulations as "[...] a coffee and milk beverage that should produce a harmonious balance of rich, sweet milk and espresso [...] The cappuccino is prepared with one (1) single shot of espresso, textured milk and foam ("textured milk" is milk that has been aerated to its proper foam level).[12] A minimum of 1 centimeter of foam depth [...] A cappuccino is a beverage between 150 ml and 180 ml in total volume [...]."[13]
Etymology
Cappuccino comes fromLatincaputium, later borrowed in German/Austrian and modified intoKapuziner. It is the diminutive form ofcappuccio in Italian, meaning'hood' or something that covers the head, thuscappuccino literally means'small capuchin'.[citation needed]
The coffee beverage has its name not from thehood but from thecolor of the hooded robes worn byfriars andnuns of theCapuchin order.[14] This color is quite distinctive, andcapuchin was a common description of the color of red-brown in 17th-century Europe. The Capuchin friars chose the particular design of their orders' robes both in color and shape of the hood back in the 16th century, inspired byFrancis of Assisi's preserved 13th-century vestments. The long and pointed hood was characteristic and soon gave the brothers the nickname "capuchins" (hood-wearing). It was, however, the choice of red-brown as the order's vestment color that, as early as the 17th century, saw "capuchin" used also as a term for a specific color. While Francis of Assisi used uncolored and unbleached wool for his robes, the Capuchins colored their vestments to differ from Augustinians, Benedictines, Franciscans, and other orders.[citation needed]
The wordcappuccino, in its Italian form, appears in Italian writings in the 19th century and is described as "black coffee with a few drops of milk or cream which give it the color the tunic of the Capuchins, from which it takes its name".[15][16]
The old port ofTrieste, where most of the coffee for Central Europe was handled for a long time and from where the cappuccino spreadKapuziner coffee, the forerunner of cappuccino
The consumption of coffee in Europe was initially based on the traditionalOttoman preparation of the drink, by bringing to boil the mixture of coffee and water together, sometimes adding sugar. The British seem to have already started filtering and steeping coffee in the second half of the 18th century.[17]
Adding milk to coffee was already mentioned by Europeans in the 1700s.[17]
Kapuziner showed up in coffee house menus all over theHabsburg monarchy around the late 1700s.[18]
Kapuziner took its name from the color of coffee with a few drops of cream, so nicknamed because the Capuchin friars in Vienna and elsewhere wore vestments of this color.[19] Another popular coffee wasFranziskaner, with more cream, referring to the somewhat lighter brown of the tunics of theFranciscan order.Kapuziner coffee spread throughoutCentral Europe, including the Italian-speaking parts of the Habsburg monarchy. The main port of the empire, the city of Trieste, already had many Viennese coffee houses. According to a popular but unverified legend, cappuccino was named after the Italian Capuchin friarMarco d'Aviano, who contributed to the victory of theBattle of Vienna.[20]
The use of fresh milk in coffee in cafés and restaurants is a newer phenomenon (from the 20th century), introduced when refrigeration became common. The use of full cream is known much further back in time (but not in the use as whipped cream [chantilly]), as this was a product more easily stored and frequently used also in cooking and baking. Thus, aKapuziner was prepared with a very small amount of cream to get the capuchin color. Today,Kapuziner is still served in Viennese traditional cafés, comprising still black coffee with only a few drops of cream (in some establishments developed into a dollop of whipped cream), or frothed milk instead of cream.[21]
Cappuccino as written today (in Italian) is first mentioned in the 19th century[9][15][16] and is described as "black coffee with a few drops of milk or cream".[16] The modern Italian cappuccino evolved and developed in the following decades: the steamed milk on top is a later addition, and in the US a slight misunderstanding has led to the naming of this "cap" of milk foam "monk's head", although it originally had nothing to do with the name of the beverage.Kapuziner remained unchanged on some Austrian coffee menus and inBratislava,Budapest,Prague, and other cities of the former empire, but it also is found in a modernized version that includes black coffee and frothed milk only.[21]
By the end of theWorld War II, Italians launched the "age of crema" as the new coffee machines could create a higher pressure, leading to a finer grind and the now classic crema.[citation needed]
In the United Kingdom, espresso coffee initially gained popularity in the form of cappuccino, influenced by the British custom of drinking coffee with milk, the desire for a longer drink to preserve the café as a destination, and the exotic texture of the beverage.[23]
In the United States, cappuccino spread alongside espresso in Italian American neighborhoods, such as Boston's North End, New York's Little Italy, and San Francisco's North Beach. New York City'sCaffe Reggio (founded in 1927) claims to have introduced cappuccino to the United States,[24] while San Francisco'sCaffe Trieste (founded in 1956) claims to have introduced it to the west coast; the earlier Tosca Cafe in San Francisco (founded in 1919) served a "cappuccino" earlier, but this was without coffee, and instead consisted of chocolate, steamed milk, and brandy.[25]
Popularity
In Italy and throughout continental Europe, cappuccino is traditionally consumed in the morning, usually as part of breakfast, often with some type of pastry. Italians generally do not drink cappuccino with meals other than breakfast, although they often drink espresso after lunch or dinner.[26][27] In Italy, cappuccino is usually consumed up to 11:00am, since cappuccinos are milk-based and considered too heavy to drink later in the day.[28] Instead, espresso is usually ordered after a meal due to the belief that the lack of milk aids in digestion.[26] In North America, cappuccinos have become popular concurrent with the boom in the American coffee industry through the late 1990s and early 2000s, especially in the urban Pacific Northwest.[29] In South Korea, espresso and its variants (cappuccino, latte, andcaffè mocha) became popular in 2000.[30]
Cappuccino is traditionally served in 150–180 ml (5–6 imp fl oz; 5–6 US fl oz) cups. By the start of the 21st century, a modified "short-cut" version was being served by fast-food chains in servings up to 600 ml (21 imp fl oz; 20 US fl oz).
Preparation
Traditional
Cappuccino coffee being made
Although size is what varies most among cappuccinos served in different regions, the traditional way of preparing cappuccino is to add equal proportions of the ingredients:1⁄3 espresso,1⁄3 steamed milk and1⁄3 milk foam.[31] The drink may often be topped with a dusting of chocolate or cocoa powder. Instead of pouring the steamed milk and then adding the foam, some baristas may instead prepare an extra foamy milk with the steam wand and then pour in this mixture of hot milk and foam as one, as this saves time compared to separately pouring the hot milk and then layering on the foam.
Freddo cappuccino
In Greece and Cyprus, a cold cappuccino is widespread known asfreddo cappuccino, as opposed tocappuccino freddo. Despite its Italian name, the drink both tastes and is prepared differently from its Italian counterpart, and is uncommon outside of Greece.Freddo cappuccino is topped with a cold milk-based foam known asafrógala (Greek:αφρόγαλα), which is created by blending cold milk using an electric frother. These frothers are commonplace in Greek coffee shops due to their usage during the preparation offrappé coffee. The foam is then added to espresso poured over ice.[32]
Along with thefreddo espresso, they were conceived in Greece in 1991 and are in higher demand during summer.[33] Outside Greece and Cyprus,freddo cappuccino orcappuccino freddo is mostly found in coffee shops and delis catering to the Greek expat community. In 2017,Starbucks addedcappuccino freddo to branch menus in Europe.[34]
Similar drinks
Other milk and espresso drinks similar to the cappuccino include:
Macchiato (short forcaffè macchiato, sometimesespresso macchiato) is a significantly shorter drink, which consists of espresso with only a small amount of milk.
Cortado is a Spanish hybrid: a slightly shorter drink, which consists of espresso mixed with milk in a 1:1 to 1:2 ratio, and is not topped with foam. Café cortado has traditionally been served in a small glass on a saucer, and its character comes from the Spanish preference of coffee beans and roast pluscondensed milk replacing fresh dairy milk. Modern coffee shops have started using fresh milk.
Flat white is a drink which is popular in Australia and New Zealand. It can be described either as a latte served in a small cup (like a cappuccino would be), or a cappuccino made with steamed textured milk and with no foam on top ("flat" indicating less foam),[35] and is typically prepared withlatte art.
Latte (short for "caffè latte") is a larger drink, with the same amount of espresso, but with more milk textured to contain microfoam, served in a large cup or tall glass, sometimes with the milk poured to make a pattern (latte art).
Steamer (or "babycino") is a drink of frothed milk without coffee (hence nocaffeine). In the United States it often hasflavored syrup added,[36] while in Commonwealth countries it instead often has a dusting of cocoa powder.[37]
^ab"Atti della Santa Sede".Il Monitore Ecclesiastico.IV (I). Conversano: Presso la Direzione del Monitore Ecclesiastico: 194. 1885.Archived from the original on January 28, 2023. RetrievedJanuary 28, 2023....un altro di bevere un cappuccino (caffè con latte).
^abcAngiolini, Francesco (1897).Vocabolario milanese-italiano coi segni per la pronuncia. Torino – Roma – Milano – Firenze – Napoli: Ditta G. B. Paravia e Comp. p. 183.Archived from the original on January 28, 2023. RetrievedJanuary 28, 2023.Cappuccino: caffè nero con poche gocce di latte o panna che gli dànno il colore della tonaca dei cappuccini e da ciò prende il nome..
^Seong, U-je (November 30, 2000)."젊음의 커피, 에소프레소가 뜬다" [Coffee of the young, espresso is rising].Sisajournal (in Korean).Archived from the original on February 13, 2024. RetrievedFebruary 13, 2024.
Look upcappuccino in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
"Coffee Tasters Newsletter".coffeetasters.org. International Institute of Coffee Tasters. Free newsletter featuring articles on the quality of espresso, chemical and sensory analysis, and market trends.