Milk-based drinks account for the majority of café orders — and milk is one of the most temperature-sensitive, allergen-critical ingredients your baristas handle. From cold storage to steaming to serving, every step presents food safety decision points. Training your team on proper milk handling, temperature control, and allergen management protects customers and builds the trust that brings them back.
Dairy milk must remain below 4°C (40°F) from delivery through to steaming. Receiving procedures should include temperature checks — reject any delivery where milk temperature exceeds 7°C (45°F). Store milk in the coldest section of your refrigerator, away from the door where temperature fluctuates with opening.
Rotate stock using first-in-first-out (FIFO) principles. Date-mark all milk containers upon opening — opened dairy milk should be used within 48-72 hours regardless of the printed expiration date. Train baristas to check dates and discard expired product during their opening prep.
Plant-based milks have different storage requirements. Shelf-stable oat, soy, and almond milks can be stored at room temperature until opened, but require refrigeration after opening. Fresh plant milks (found in the refrigerated section) follow the same cold chain rules as dairy. Keep storage requirements posted near the refrigerator for quick reference.
The ideal steaming temperature for dairy milk is 60-65°C (140-150°F) — hot enough to create sweetness through lactose breakdown but below the point where proteins denature and develop a scalded taste. Never exceed 70°C (158°F). Use calibrated thermometers rather than relying on touch — experienced baristas can gauge approximate temperature by hand, but food safety requires measurement.
Steaming technique matters for both quality and safety. Introduce air in the first 2-3 seconds by keeping the steam tip near the surface, then submerge to create a rolling vortex that heats evenly. Uneven heating creates hot and cold zones — the cold zones may not reach safe temperature while the hot zones scald the milk.
Plant milks steam differently. Oat milk tolerates slightly higher temperatures (up to 65°C) and froths well. Soy milk curdles above 60°C, especially with acidic espresso. Almond milk produces less foam and separates more easily. Train baristas on each milk type's behavior to prevent waste and ensure consistent results.
Steam wand contamination is one of the most common café hygiene failures found during health inspections. After every use — not every few uses, every single use — purge the steam wand for 2 seconds to blow out residual milk from inside the tip, then immediately wipe the exterior with a dedicated damp cloth.
Milk proteins dry onto steam wand surfaces within minutes, forming a biofilm that harbors bacteria. Once dried, this residue requires scrubbing to remove. During service, if dried milk accumulates, wrap the wand with a cloth soaked in hot water for 30 seconds to soften residue before wiping.
At day's end, remove the steam tip (if removable) and soak in approved sanitizer or espresso machine milk-line cleaner. Inspect the steam holes — blocked holes affect steam pressure and create splashing that can burn baristas. Use a thin pin or dedicated cleaning tool to clear blocked holes. Replace steam tips showing corrosion or damage.
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Try it free →Milk is one of the major food allergens, and cross-contact between dairy and non-dairy milks can trigger severe allergic reactions. Establish clear protocols for allergen-safe drink preparation.
Designate a separate steaming pitcher for plant milks — visually distinct from dairy pitchers (different color or size). Never use a dairy-contaminated pitcher for a customer who has requested plant milk due to a dairy allergy. Some cafés maintain separate steam wands for dairy and non-dairy, though this requires a machine with multiple wands.
When a customer declares a milk allergy, treat it as a critical food safety event. Use a clean, sanitized pitcher. Purge and wipe the steam wand thoroughly before steaming the plant milk. Prepare the drink in a clean area, away from dairy splash zones. Communicate the allergy order clearly to all staff involved — verbal confirmation and written cup marking.
Tree nut milks (almond, cashew, macadamia) introduce additional allergen concerns. A customer avoiding dairy may also have nut allergies. Always ask clarifying questions when allergens are mentioned — never assume plant milk means any plant milk is acceptable.
Never re-steam milk that has already been heated and cooled. Once milk drops below 60°C after steaming, bacteria can multiply rapidly in the nutrient-rich, warm liquid. Discard leftover steamed milk — do not pour it back into the cold milk container or save it for the next order.
Estimate steaming volumes accurately to minimize waste. Train baristas to steam only the amount needed for the current order. A 12-ounce latte needs approximately 10 ounces of steamed milk — steaming a full 20-ounce pitcher wastes product and creates a temptation to re-use excess.
Track milk waste as a food cost metric. If baristas consistently over-steam, it indicates a training gap that has both financial and food safety implications. High waste correlates with sloppy handling practices — addressing waste often improves overall hygiene discipline simultaneously.
Your baristas and café staff handle food and beverages all day — proper hygiene, allergen awareness, and temperature management aren't optional. One untrained team member can cause a foodborne illness outbreak or trigger a costly health inspection failure.
MmowW's free Training Quiz tests your team's food safety knowledge with café-specific scenarios, identifying gaps before they become violations.
Start Your Free Cafe Training Quiz → mmoww.net/food/tools/training-quiz/en/
Dairy milk should not exceed 70°C (158°F) during steaming. The ideal range for texture and sweetness is 60-65°C (140-150°F). Above 70°C, milk proteins denature, producing a scalded taste, and the nutritional profile degrades.
No. Once steamed milk cools below 60°C, it enters the temperature danger zone where bacteria multiply rapidly. Always discard leftover steamed milk and steam fresh milk for each order. Re-steaming also degrades texture and flavor.
Use a designated, visually distinct pitcher for plant milks. Purge and thoroughly wipe the steam wand before steaming non-dairy milk for an allergy customer. Prepare the drink away from dairy splash zones and confirm the allergy verbally with all staff handling the order.
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