Hello everybody, hope you’re having an incredible day today. Today, I’m gonna show you how to make a distinctive dish, taiwanese dessert - boba pearls. One of my favorites food recipes. For mine, I’m gonna make it a bit unique. This will be really delicious.
Bubble tea (also known as pearl milk tea, bubble milk tea, or boba) (Chinese: 珍珠奶茶; pinyin: zhēn zhū nǎi chá, 波霸奶茶; bō bà nǎi chá; or 泡泡茶; pào pào chá in Singapore). How to cook the boba pearls Then transfer the balls into a cold water (they shrink to original size immediately).
Taiwanese Dessert - Boba Pearls is one of the most popular of current trending foods on earth. It is enjoyed by millions daily. It is simple, it is quick, it tastes yummy. Taiwanese Dessert - Boba Pearls is something that I’ve loved my whole life. They are fine and they look fantastic.
To begin with this recipe, we have to first prepare a few components. You can have taiwanese dessert - boba pearls using 12 ingredients and 12 steps. Here is how you cook it.
The ingredients needed to make Taiwanese Dessert - Boba Pearls:
- Prepare Boba Pearls
- Prepare 1 cup or about 135 gr tapioca starch + 2 more tbsp for dusting and coating
- Prepare 6 tbsp water/90 ml water
- Get 60 gr brown sugar
- Prepare For the syrup:
- Make ready 1 cup brown sugar
- Make ready 1 brown sugar slab
- Prepare 100 ml water
- Take Taro Balls
- Get 300 gr Sweet potatoes(purple/yellow)/yam/pumpkin
- Take 50 gr Sugar
- Prepare 150 gr Tapioca flour
They are so simple to make and I decided to make a how to make boba pearls at Homemade Boba Pearls VS Commercial Boba Pearls. The commercially produce boba pearls for chain businesses contain a lots of additives, to. These boba milk tea popsicles are a refreshing way to enjoy milk tea bubble tea with chewy hand-rolled pearls as a frozen dessert. Bubble tea, bubble milk tea, boba milk tea, pearl milk tea, bbt are all different names for the same drink.
Steps to make Taiwanese Dessert - Boba Pearls:
- In a small pot, slightly heat the water and dissolve brown sugar over slowest fire (to avoid too much water lost). Make sure the sugar is dissolved. Heat the liquid to a boiling and then use slowest fire. Now, add 1/2 of the tapioca starch in and mix quickly (Count 6 to 7seconds). Turn off the fire or remove from fire and add the remaining 1/2 of the tapioca starch. Mix until gathered. Quick during the process.
- Place the remaining flour on an operation board. Transfer the smooth paste in and knead into a dough with the help of a scraper blade. At first, it might be slightly sticky. Continue kneading until smooth. Be quick during the process. The dough becomes hard to control when cool down completely.
- Divide the dough into 4 portions. Remember to cover the other three with plastic bag. Then shape one portion into a long log (around 1.5 cm in diameter), cut the log into small cubes.
- Round each small squares to small balls (be patient and do not require prefect roundness).
- In a large plate, spread some flour and coat each ball with enough flour to avoid sticking to each other. After finish all of the pearls, shift the extra flour off. You can now package in air-tight bags and freeze for later use.
- For the syrup: In a small pot, melt 2 slices of brown sugar slab and 1cup brown sugar with 100ml water in a small pot. Heat until there are large bubbles. Or you can simply use brown sugar syrup.
- Bring a large pot of water (at least 6 times of the volume of the pearls) and cook the pears for 20 to 30 minutes. Then transfer the balls into a cold water (they shrink to original size immediately). Wash under running water. Drain and mix with 2 tablespoons of brown sugar syrup or honey (or sugar) to avoid sticky together.
- For the taro ball: steam the sweet potatoes until soft. Once it is cooked and warm, mash it and mix with sugar. Mix with tapioca flour (little by little)
- Transfer it to the floured surface and knead until it forms to a non-sticky dough.
- Take a portion of dough, roll it out into a log about 2-cm in diameter. Cut them into pieces, dust the cut pieces generously with tapioca flour (so they won’t stick to one another).
- To cook taro balls, bring a pot of water to boil, add taro balls and keep stirring (so that they won’t stick). Continue boiling for another 2-3 min after taro balls float on the surface. Transfer drained taro balls to a bowl of ice water to cool down (this way they’ll be chewier
- To serve: arrange boba pearls, taro balls, jelly (cook as per instruction) and ice cream 🍨. You can add grassjelly, sweetened red bean, milk, drizzle with honey etc.
The squishy, chewy tapioca pearls are so addictive and I always. Taiwan is the undisputed boba capital of the world: Here, the midday caffeine hit is a boba break, not a coffee run, and a shoulder-slung boba cupholder is the must-have accessory. Over the last several decades, these bracing cups of sweet, creamy, chewy refreshment — which are also called "bubble. Boba, sometimes called bubble tea or pearl milk tea, doesn't look anything like your typical cup of hot tea: This popular Taiwanese drink is served cold, and The "bubbles," or boba, are actually tapioca pearls—the same kind of pearls you would find in a cup of tapioca pudding. This is a traditional Taiwanese dessert made using taro.
So that’s going to wrap this up with this exceptional food taiwanese dessert - boba pearls recipe. Thanks so much for your time. I’m confident you can make this at home. There’s gonna be interesting food in home recipes coming up. Don’t forget to bookmark this page on your browser, and share it to your loved ones, colleague and friends. Thank you for reading. Go on get cooking!