Two tall glasses of boba milk tea next to a bowl of tapioca balls - Ika Rahma/Getty Images Bubble tea -- often called boba tea -- has exploded in popularity across the United States in recent years, ...
Maybe it's the chewy, craveable texture of the tapioca balls, the creaminess of the milky tea, or the simple satisfaction of popping the straw into the sealed plastic top — people can't get enough of ...
Taiwan is the undisputed boba capital of the world: Here, the midday caffeine hit is a boba break, not a coffee run, and a shoulder-slung boba cupholder is the must-have accessory. Over the last ...
Bubble tea or boba has become a catch-all for a cavalcade of refreshing, comforting, and downright intriguing liquids. These range from the classic milk tea (typically black, green, or oolong) and ...
When bubble tea was first introduced to the West, you could get it only in cheery mom-and-pop shops in big-city Chinatowns and Koreatowns. While Asians and Asian Americans have been drinking bubble ...
You know about bubble or boba tea, right? The Taiwanese-invented cold iced tea you drink with a thick straw so you can suck up the big, chewy, gelatin-like balls made with tapioca. But are you ...
Bubble tea -- often called boba tea -- has exploded in popularity across the United States in recent years, and it's likely to get even more popular as time goes on. The Taiwanese beverage is ...