coffee-tini

See also: coffeetini

English

Noun

coffee-tini (plural coffee-tinis)

  1. Alternative form of coffeetini.
    • 2005 October 20, Lisa Bramen, “The latest Mad Lib martini”, in The Post-Star, 101st year, number 331, Glens Falls, N.Y., page 5:
      Then came the era of the Mad Libs martini. The apple-tini. The coffee-tini.
    • 2013 March 29, Andrew Nyakupfuka, “Kona Coffee”, in Global Delicacies: Diversity, Exotic, Strange, Weird, Relativism, Bloomington, Ind.: Balboa Press, →ISBN, page 276:
      Kona Coffee-tini
    • 2018 January 11, Leeanne Griffin, “Bistro On Main Breaks Barriers”, in Hartford Courant, volume CLXXXII, number 11, page D3:
      Others are inspired by world cuisines with French influence: a Moroccan spice Manhattan, a Vietnamese tea cooler, a coffee-tini with Haitian rum, crème de coconut and crème de banana.
    • 2021 October 10, Kevin Seccia, “The Yawn of the Dead Adventure” (19:00 from the start), in The Great North[1], season 2, episode 3, spoken by Principal Gibbons (Tim Bagley):
      “What about Mrs. Feldspar? She was dead on the floor.” “Sometimes Mrs. Feldspar has a few too many coffee-tinis in the morning. She's from a different generation.”
    • 2022, Rebecca Suzanne, chapter 23, in The Black Sheep, →ISBN, page 245:
      I had been looking forward to creating intricate cocktails with different versions of coffee drinks all night. A coffee-tini. The ol’ Irish coffee. Or just a regular latte in general to help pep up our steps again.