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Boba.
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It's taken the world by storm.
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It's exciting.
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Cheers.
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Two men on a mission to make better boba, which is milk tea with tapioca pearls.
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But what exactly is boba, and what's with all the hype?
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[How boba came to be]
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Invented in the 80s, boba is a popular beverage that originates from Taiwan.
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Still, the West is just beginning to understand it.
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The New York Times famously called it the blobs in your tea and promptly issued an apology after all the backlash.
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Both of these tea shops in Taiwan claim they were the first to invent boba in the '80s.
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As the story goes, someone working at the shop decided to put tapioca pearls into tea on a whim, and liked it.
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[Side note: The addition of brown sugar in later recipes is what made them look like this.]
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But tapioca isn't indigenous to Asia.
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It's a starch derived from the cassava root, a tuber native to South America.
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It came to Asia in the 19th century via Portuguese traders.
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And it thrived in Taiwan because Taiwan has a similar subtropical climate to parts of South America.
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Modern boba pearls are made by combining tapioca starch with brown sugar water.
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They're then submerged in a mix of tea and non-dairy milk creamer.
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But where did the word "boba" come from?
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It's actually slang in Chinese for "big boobs," and came to be associated with the drink in 1988, when a southern Taiwanese tea shop named their tapioca drinks after Hong Kong sex symbol Amy Yip.
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Her nickname?
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Boba.
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Today, the drink is all over Asia, and has quite a following in the States, mostly in California and New York, where there are significant Taiwanese-American populations.
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There's a regional divide in what the different coasts call the beverage.
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But vernacular aside, those starchy, gooey pearls have become an important symbol of Asian-American culture.
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♪We call it boba, you might call it bubble tea.♪
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♪Fill up a stamp card, might get a couple free.♪
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♪It's Chinese culture to stay with a cup of tea.♪
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♪We updated...♪
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Google search trends over the last five years shows a huge increase in searches for the drink across the United States.
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And the global market is expected to balloon to 3 billion USD by 2023.
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And three decades since its invention, it doesn't seem to be going away anytime soon.
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