Coffee with milk Coffee with condensed milk Café bombón was made popular in
Valencia, Spain, and spread gradually to the rest of the country. It might have been re-created and modified to suit European tastebuds as in many parts of Asia such as Malaysia, Thailand, Vietnam and Singapore. The same recipe for coffee which is called
Kopi Susu Panas (Malaysia), or
Gafeh Rorn [lit: hot coffee] (Thailand) has already been around for decades and is very popular in
mamak stalls and
kopitiams in Malaysia. The iced version is known as
cà phê đá in Vietnam. A café bombón, however, uses espresso served with sweetened condensed milk in a 1:1 ratio whereas the Asian version uses ground coffee and sweetened condensed milk at different ratios. On the Canary Islands a variety named
café proprio or
largo condensada is served using the same amount of condensed milk but with "café largo" or espresso lungo. For café bombón, the condensed milk is added to the espresso. For visual effect, a glass is used, and the condensed milk is added slowly to sink underneath the coffee and create two separate bands of contrasting colour – though these layers are customarily stirred together before consumption. Some establishments merely serve an espresso with a sachet of condensed milk for patrons to make themselves.
Coffee with coconut milk There is a coffee drink combined with coconut milk from
Blora,
Indonesia. It is called
kopi santen (Javanese) or
kopi santan (Indonesian). Formulated for the first time in 1980 by a grandmother named Sakijah.
Slow-brewed and espresso Regular coffee (slow brewed as with a filter or cafetière) is sometimes combined with espresso to increase either the intensity of the flavour or the caffeine content. This may be called a variety of names, most commonly
red eye, or
shot in the dark. Coffeehouse chains may have their own names, such as
turbo at
Dunkin' Donuts. and
depth charge – a
federally registered trademark of
Caribou Coffee. At Starbucks, a double shot of espresso in the coffee may be termed a "black eye", and a triple shot a "dead eye". "Caffè Tobio" is a version with an equal amount of coffee to espresso. A quad shot into a 16oz of coffee is called a “Hate Myself” •
Caffè corretto (that is an Italian drink, consists of a shot of espresso "corrected" with a shot of liquor, usually
grappa, brandy or
sambuca.) • Ponce, a hot drink, akin to tea
grog (the name itself is a
calque of
punch) originating in
Leghorn port: a shot of espresso poured on top of rum made hot with the espresso machine steamer. A lemon zest is often added. • A
carajillo is a Spanish drink combining coffee with brandy, whisky,
anisette, or rum. It is typical of Spain and according to folk etymology, its origin dates to the Spanish occupation of Cuba. The troops combined coffee with rum to give them courage (coraje in Spanish, hence "corajillo" and more recently "carajillo"). There are many different ways of making a carajillo, ranging from black coffee with the spirit simply poured in to heating the spirit with lemon, sugar and cinnamon and adding the coffee last. A similar Italian drink is known as
caffè corretto. The American version of a Spanish Coffee uses a heated sugar-rimmed Spanish coffee mug with of rum and of
triple sec. The drink is then flamed to caramelize the sugar, with of coffee liqueur then added to put out the flame, and then topped off with of coffee, and whipped cream. • Hasseltse koffie, Vlaamse koffie or Afzakkertje (coffee with
Hasseltse jenever). • Hotshot is a Swedish shot with 1 part
Galliano, 1 part coffee and 1 part heavy cream. •
Irish coffee •
Karsk, kaffegök or svartkopp (coffee with
moonshine) •
Rüdesheimer Kaffee is an alcoholic coffee drink from Rüdesheim in Germany invented in 1957 by Hans Karl Adam. It is made with
Asbach Uralt brandy with coffee and sugar, and is topped with whipped cream. • A (), meaning a
Pharisee, is an alcoholic coffee drink that is popular in the
Nordfriesland district of Germany. It consists of a mug of black coffee, a double shot of rum, and a topping of whipped cream. In 1981, a court in
Flensburg ruled that of rum were not sufficient for preparing a genuine . • A
gunfire has its origins in the British Army, typically made by mixing black tea with rum, though in Australia and New Zealand it is more often made with black coffee instead. On
ANZAC Day, this version is served to soldiers before dawn services as part of the "gunfire breakfast". ==Flavoured==