Vivi bubble tea columbus11/30/2023 ![]() They had a good chew to them, but really tasted like nothing.ģ. ![]() The “Q” factor of the bubbles was not actually that bad. Not only is this not like anything I’ve ever had, but it was really light in tea flavor, almost as if I was just drinking a-little-bit-sweetened coconut milk with a bit of honey. ![]() The only upside: with Dining Dollars, it’s the cheapest out of the bunch at $2.76.įirst of all, Crane Cafe uses coconut milk. I wanted to get a campus option, but my order of “Honey and Vanilla Bubble Tea” - one of two options Crane Cafe offered and the closest to my original order - was not good. Crane Cafe, Hagerty Hall: “Honey and Vanilla Bubble Tea,” $4.25 I mainly focused on a few things: the sweetness of the tea, the taste of the bubbles and what I call the “Q” factor - what Taiwanese people say to describe the chewiness and bounciness of food.Ĥ. To be as fair as possible, I tried to get the same order at each place - a traditional black milk tea with bubbles, regular size, no ice for less dilution and “normal” amount of sugar option because most shops allow you to adjust the specific amount. Now, there are a few new bubble tea drink shops around campus as well as some that are a little older, so I tried some out (for the sake of journalism, of course) to see which ones were great, and which ones were … not. Growing up, I had to go back to Taiwan to get good bubble tea - a black milk tea drink with tapioca pearls. Credit: Michael Lee | Outreach and Engagement Editor A Chatime Milk Tea with bubbles from Chatime on High Street in Columbus, OH.
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