Every summer I have a favorite drink and this year it is "bubble tea." I'll bet many on this board have tried it (and if you have I would love to hear what you think). I can't recall where I first heard about bubble tea but I do know it was described as a drink gaining rapidly in popularity. It's been around for a few years. Here is an excerpt from a NY Times article about it:
The multiflavored drinks (mango, peanut, blackberry chocolate) -- also called pearl tea and boba tea -- hit the street in Taipei some 15 years ago and spread like a fad. But the drinks didn't fade, becoming a crucial part of the island's social fabric, particularly for the young.
Then came the great bubble tea migration. "In Hong Kong you find it everywhere, like Starbucks," said Andrew Lam, 23, an engineer at Lucent Technology. After Hong Kong, bubble tea emerged in Canada, reached the West Coast about five years ago, then spread to Houston, Washington and New York. After securing its Manhattan niche, bubble tea flowed to the Chinatowns beyond Manhattan, to places like the Bubble Cafe in Flushing, Queens, and Saint's Alp Teahouse in Sunset Park, Brooklyn.
"The traditional teahouse is like killing time for the older generation," said Dai-Yi Ou, 30, a Taiwan native sipping at Ten Ren's Tea Time on Mott Street. "This is younger-generation social activity."
Here's how I make my bubble tea:
Brewed tea (I used decaf black tea but you can use any kind--lychee, green tea, etc.) I brew my tea in a crockpot with a quart or more of mint leaves from my garden (peppermint, apple mint, ginger mint or chocolate mint).
Milk Cooked tapioca pearls (these take about 30" to cook)
Syrup (boil 1 part brown sugar, 2 parts white sugar and 3 parts water)
Mix the cooled syrup and tapioca pearls (also cooled) together and put in a storage container so you can store it in the frig.
Mix half tea and half milk. Stir in crushed ice. Add a few tablespoons of pearls and syrup to taste to your level of sweetness.
I love slurping up the pearls! They are chewy and cool and when they are in the glass, they swirl around, just like bubbles.
Where do you get your bubble tea? What flavors have you tried?
Cher