Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Seattle Best Tea is a family-owned business operating two tea shops in Seattle, in the U.S. state of Washington. Lydia Lin and Joe Hsu opened the original shop in the Chinatown–International District in 1996, followed by a second in the University District in 2023.
Oasis Tea Zone is a small chain of restaurants in the Seattle metropolitan area, in the U.S. state of Washington. [1] The Liu family opened the original cafe in Seattle's Chinatown–International District in c. 2001. The business has expanded to three locations, as of 2022, operating in the University District and in Edmonds. It has garnered a ...
[2] [4] There is also a location at The Village at Totem Lake in Kirkland, Washington. [5] [6] [7] In 2022, the Seattle shop participated in the city's first boba festival, which was held in the University District to commemorate National Bubble Tea Day. [8] [9] [10] Don't Yell at Me had plans to expand to Broadway on Seattle's Capitol Hill in ...
Drip Tea is a bubble tea (or boba) cafe and concept store, called Drip Tea Market, in Seattle, Washington. The business operates on Capitol Hill, and sells boba and desserts, as well as clothing and sneakers. Owned by Paul Kwon, Justin Ngyuen, and Lena Phan, Drip Tea opened in February 2020, prior to the arrival of the COVID-19 pandemic. Upon ...
The Seattle Weekly is an alternative biweekly distributed newspaper in Seattle, Washington, United States. It was founded by Darrell Oldham and David Brewster as The Weekly. Its first issue was published on March 31, 1976, and it became a web-only publication on March 1, 2019.
The first Torrefazione Italia café opened in Seattle, Washington in 1986. Espresso, coffee and baked goods were served in their cafés.. Umberto Bizzarri, Torrefazione's founder, teamed up with Stewart Brother's Coffee (later renamed Seattle's Best Coffee) founder, Jim Stewart, in the mid-1980s to create Seattle Coffee Holdings.
Northwest Asian Weekly published its first edition on February 5, 1983, as the successor to an English insert in the Seattle Chinese Post that debuted in September 1982. [1] Both newspapers were published by Assunta Ng; among the early supporters of the Asian Weekly was Gary Locke, who later became the first Asian American governor of Washington.
On August 21, 2013, Robinson Newspapers announced that it would combine the Ballard News-Tribune, the Highline Times, the West Seattle Herald, and White Center News into The Westside Weekly on September 6, 2013. [11] In 2014, Amanda Knox began writing for the paper. [12]