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  2. Coffee & Vanilla - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coffee_&_Vanilla

    Coffee & Vanilla (Japanese: コーヒー&バニラ, Hepburn: Kōhī Ando Banira) is a Japanese manga series by Takara Akegami. Coffee & Vanilla is serialized in the monthly josei manga magazine Cheese! from April 2015 to January 2024. In addition, a spin-off series titled Coffee & Vanilla Black ran in the digital monthly magazine Premier Cheese ...

  3. Kopi (drink) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kopi_(drink)

    Kopi (Chinese: 咖啡; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: ko-pi), also known as Nanyang coffee, is a traditional coffee beverage found in several Southeast Asian nations. Often brewed to be highly caffeinated, it is commonly served with sugar and/or milk-based condiments. The drink originated during the British Malaya era and has Hainanese cultural roots.

  4. Ya Kun Kaya Toast - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ya_Kun_Kaya_Toast

    Kaya toast with boiled eggs and coffee is the signature dish of Ya Kun Kaya Toast. Ya Kun Kaya Toast has over forty Singaporean outlets, [12] about half of which are franchised, [11] [13] and over thirty overseas outlets, [12] all franchised, [11] across seven countries (China, Indonesia, Japan, Myanmar, South Korea, Taiwan, Philippines and United Arab Emirates [14]); they plan to expand to ...

  5. List of coffee drinks - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_coffee_drinks

    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 ...

  6. Kaya toast - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kaya_toast

    Kaya toast is a dish consisting of two slices of toast with butter and kaya (coconut jam), commonly served alongside kopi and soft-boiled eggs. [3] [4] The dish was believed to be created by Hainanese immigrants to the Straits Settlements in the 19th century while serving on British ships.

  7. Cha chaan teng - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cha_chaan_teng

    Cha chaan teng (Chinese: 茶餐廳; Cantonese Yale: chàhchāantēng; lit. 'tea restaurant'), often called a Hong Kong-style cafe or diner in English, is a type of restaurant that originated in Hong Kong.

  8. Vietnamese iced coffee - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vietnamese_iced_coffee

    'A cup of white milk with a bit of coffee'): [3] Cantonese-Vietnamese hot or iced milk with some added coffee, similar to a latte macchiato. Origin and popular in Saigon – Chợ Lớn. Pandan coffee - Cà phê lá dứa: Made with coffee, Pandan paste, and honey. Coconut coffee - Cà phê dừa: Made with coffee, coconut milk, and condensed milk.

  9. Chifa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chifa

    The term came to prominence in Lima in the 1930s, when Limeños heard Chinese people using the expression "chifan" as a call to eat in the restaurants they ran. [ 7 ] A similar loanword , chaufa (a chifa fried rice dish), comes from the Cantonese 炒飯 or chaofan ( Jyutping : caau 3 faan 6 ), meaning "fried rice".