Bubble Tea Quotes

Quotes tagged as "bubble-tea" Showing 1-4 of 4
Jennifer J. Chow
“It is a truth universally acknowledged, that a single woman in possession of a good fortune, must be in want of a book.”
Jennifer J. Chow, Death by Bubble Tea

Ruby Tandoh
“Bubble tea isn't one thing but an umbrella term for a miscellany of Instagrammable drinks, many of which don't have tea, milk, or even tapioca pearls. They can be fruit-based, or blended milk with chestnut purée, or high-concept versions made from scratch with oolong and hand-rolled pearls. You choose a base tea, add-ins, sugar and ice levels, milk types and whether or not to get a top of sweet-salty cheese cream-- a thick, plush foam head, which gives black tea the visuals of a pint of Guinness. Depending on the drink, you can choose hot or cold. The permutations are seemingly endless-- even the most seasoned off-menu Starbucks drink aficionados can get overwhelmed by up to a thousand possible routes through the menu.”
Ruby Tandoh, All Consuming: Why We Eat the Way We Eat Now

Ruby Tandoh
“Bubble tea is so big among Gen Z and Millennials that for the first time in my lifetime, there's a genuine challenge to the supremacy of coffee shops. It's a generational shift. The last time a food took off this quickly in Britain, it was the fifties, and it was hamburgers.”
Ruby Tandoh, All Consuming: Why We Eat the Way We Eat Now

Ruby Tandoh
“In Taiwan, where bubble tea was invented, people have been drinking Chinese tea styles with milk since Dutch colonization in the seventeenth century. But milk tea-- specifically, Indian black teas where milkiness is as important as the tea-- arrived late, some time around the Second World War. As the story goes, a former bartender, Chang Fan Shu, thought to serve it cold, and shake it like you would a cocktail. When he did this, the fats and proteins in the milk allowed it to form a foam, and he made what people started to call bubble tea. Some shops started serving iced versions, shaken like a cocktail. And then in the eighties, in a Taiwanese tea shop-- and nobody can agree which one-- someone had the idea of adding chewy pearls of tapioca starch to the bubble tea, making bubble tea-squared. New variants quickly appeared. Earl Grey boba tea. Milkless jasmine green tea or osmanthus versions. A lot of the time the tea was lost completely, most notably in the crystalline pop fruit flavors such as lychee or mulberry, although also in milkshake-like blends like lilac taro.”
Ruby Tandoh, All Consuming: Why We Eat the Way We Eat Now