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  2. Bubble trouble: Boba company in hot water after Simu Liu ...

    www.aol.com/bubble-trouble-boba-company-hot...

    A bubble tea company called Bobba is in hot water after Chinese Canadian actor Simu Liu voiced concerns about cultural appropriation on CBC’s “Dragons’ Den.”

  3. In an episode of Canada’s Dragons’ Den, which aired on Thursday (October 10), Sébastien Fiset and Jess Frenette, founders of a bottled popping boba and alcoholic bubble tea brand called Bobba ...

  4. What Is Boba? Everything You Need to Know About Bubble Tea - AOL

    www.aol.com/boba-everything-know-bubble-tea...

    Boba tea—a Taiwanese drink that consists of milk, tea and balls of tapioca—is all the rage right now. And yes, it is texturally exciting and downright delicious…but what is boba, exactly?

  5. Tapioca pearl - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tapioca_pearl

    In Taiwan, bubble tea is commonly referred to as pearl milk tea (zhēn zhū nǎi chá, 珍珠奶茶) because originally, small tapioca pearls with a 2.1 mm (1 ⁄ 12 in) diameter were used. It was only when one tea shop owner—in an attempt to make his tea stand out—decided to use larger tapioca balls and chose a more provocative name, "boba ...

  6. Popping boba - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Popping_boba

    Popping boba in bubble tea, being drunk through a straw. Popping boba, also called popping pearls, [1] is a type of boba used in bubble tea.Unlike traditional boba, which is tapioca-based, popping boba is made using the spherification process that relies on the reaction of sodium alginate and either calcium chloride or calcium lactate.

  7. Bubble tea - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bubble_tea

    Bubble tea has become so commonplace among teenagers that teenage girls in Japan invented slang for it: tapiru (タピる). The word is short for drinking tapioca tea in Japanese, and it won first place in a survey of "Japanese slang for middle school girls" in 2018. [42] A bubble tea theme park was open for a limited time in 2019 in Harajuku ...

  8. Why the Roots of Boba Tea Are More Important Than Ever - AOL

    www.aol.com/why-roots-boba-tea-more-210100088.html

    Ever since the first wave of boba tea shops hit the U.S. in the 1990s, the popularity of the Taiwanese drink with floating tapioca balls sipped through oversized straws has been bursting.

  9. Boba - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boba

    Bubble tea, or boba tea, a Taiwanese drink "Boba", 8th episode of Servant; See also. Boba Fett (disambiguation) All pages with titles beginning with Boba; All pages ...