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Sweet, creamy tea swimming with chewy tapioca boba pearls — otherwise known as bubble tea — was originally invented in Taiwan ...
Contrary to its name, there are no bubbles in bubble tea. There isn't always tea, either. Even so, people are obsessed with the drink that features a base made from tea, fruit, coffee or milk and ...
Bubble tea started in Taiwan during the 1980s when Liu Han-Chieh added sweetened tapioca pearls to cold tea at Chun Shui Tang ...
They all contributed to the rise of bubble tea, the insanely popular Taiwanese drink that’s taken the world by storm in recent years. And now, it’s back in the spotlight thanks to recent ...
Boba or bubble tea is a hugely popular beverage across the world, savoured for its unique combination of flavors and chewy ...
The chain's drink gurus were inspired by East Asian beverages made with boba, or bubble tea tapioca balls. “We started with fruit pieces, but we wanted something even bolder,” said Starbucks ...
Also known as boba, this drink has taken the world by storm, with bubble tea chains springing up like mushrooms around the world from Japan and Malaysia to the United States and Australia.
As much a textural marvel as a refreshing drink, bubble tea is one of Taiwan’s most renowned cultural exports. The eponymous ‘bubbles’ aren’t the result of carbonation, but a pile of chewy ...
Bubble tea, the trendy pop culture favorite drink is admittedly intriguing especially because of the chewy balls of textured tapioca, aka boba, at the bottom of the glass in an eye-catching manner.
Designed by Google artists Sophie Diao and Celine You, the logo features the drink alongside a canine character. The player controls a dog who runs a bubble tea stall in the middle of a rainy forest.