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    The sweet potato or sweetpotato (Ipomoea batatas) is a dicotyledonous plant that belongs to the bindweed or morning glory family, Convolvulaceae. Its large, starchy, sweet-tasting tuberous roots are used as a root vegetable.[3][4] The young shoots and leaves are sometimes eaten as greensCultivars of the sweet potato have been bred to bear tubers with flesh and skin of various colors. Sweet potato is only distantly related to the common potato (Solanum tuberosum), both being in the order Solanales. Although darker sweet potatoes are often referred to as “yams” in parts of North America, the species is even more distant from the true yams, which are monocots in the order Dioscoreales.[5]

    The sweet potato is native to the tropical regions of South America in what is present-day Ecuador.[6][7] Of the approximately 50 genera and more than 1,000 species of Convolvulaceae, I. batatas is the only crop plant of major importance—some others are used locally (e.g., I. aquatica “kangkong” as a green vegetable), but many are poisonous. The genus Ipomoea that contains the sweet potato also includes several garden flowers called morning glories, but that term is not usually extended to I. batatas. Some cultivars of I. batatas are grown as ornamental plants under the name tuberous morning glory, and used in a horticultural context. Sweet potatoes can also be called yams in North America. When soft varieties were first grown commercially there, there was a need to differentiate between the two. Enslaved Africans had already been calling the ‘soft’ sweet potatoes ‘yams’ because they resembled the unrelated yams in Africa.[8] Thus, ‘soft’ sweet potatoes were referred to as ‘yams’ to distinguish them from the ‘firm’ varieties.

    Description

    [edit]

    The flowers, buds, and leaves of the sweet potato, which resemble those of the morning glory
    Seeds

    The plant is a herbaceous perennial vine, bearing alternate triangle-shaped or palmately lobed leaves and medium-sized sympetalous flowers. The stems are usually crawling on the ground and form adventitious roots at the nodes. The leaves are screwed along the stems. The leaf stalk is 13 to 51 centimetres (5 to 20 inches) long. The leaf blades are very variable, 5 to 13 cm (2 to 5 in) long, the shape is heart-, kidney- to egg-shaped, rounded or triangular and spear-shaped, the edge can be entire, toothed or often three to seven times lobed, cut or divided. Most of the leaf surfaces are bare, rarely hairy, and the tip is rounded to pointed. The leaves are mostly green in color, but the accumulation of anthocyanins, especially along the leaf veins, can make them purple. Depending on the variety, the total length of a stem can be between 0.5 and 4 metres (1+12 and 13 feet). Some cultivars also form shoots up to 16 m (52 ft) in length. However, these do not form underground storage organs.[citation needed]

    The hermaphrodite, five-fold and short-stalked flowers are single or few in stalked, zymous inflorescences that arise from the leaf axils and stand upright. It produces flowers when the day is short. The small sepals are elongated and tapering to a point and spiky and (rarely only 7) 10 to 15 millimetres (38 to 58 in) long, usually finely haired or ciliate. The inner three are a little longer. The 4 to 7 cm (1+12 to 2+34 in) long, overgrown and funnel-shaped, folded crown, with a shorter hem, can be lavender to purple-lavender in color, the throat is usually darker in color, but white crowns can also appear. The enclosed stamens are of unequal length with glandular filaments. The two-chamber ovary is upper constant with a relatively short stylus.[citation needed] Seeds are only produced from cross-pollination.[9]

    The flowers open before sunrise and stay open for a few hours. They close again in the morning and begin to wither. The edible tuberous root is long and tapered, with a smooth skin whose color ranges between yellow, orange, red, brown, purple, and beige. Its flesh ranges from beige through white, red, pink, violet, yellow, orange, and purple. Sweet potato cultivars with white or pale yellow flesh are less sweet and moist than those with red, pink or orange flesh.[10]

    Taxonomy

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    Roots of the Taizhong6 cultivar compared to those of its two closest wild relatives: I. trifida and I. triloba[11]

    The sweet potato originates in South America in what is present-day Ecuador.[6][7] The domestication of sweet potato occurred in either Central or South America.[12] In Central America, domesticated sweet potatoes were present at least 5,000 years ago,[13] with the origin of I. batatas possibly between the Yucatán Peninsula of Mexico and the mouth of the Orinoco River in Venezuela.[14] The cultigen was most likely spread by local people to the Caribbean and South America by 2500 BCE.[15]

    I. trifida, a diploid, is the closest wild relative of the sweet potato, which originated with an initial cross between a tetraploid and another diploid parent, followed by a second complete genome duplication event.[16] The oldest radiocarbon dating remains of the sweet potato known today were discovered in caves from the Chilca Canyon, in the south-central zone of Peru, and yield an age of 8080 ± 170 BC.[17][18]

    Transgenicity

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    The genome of cultivated sweet potatoes contains sequences of DNA from Agrobacterium (sensu lato; specifically, one related to Rhizobium rhizogenes), with genes actively expressed by the plants.[19] The T-DNA transgenes were not observed in closely related wild relatives of the sweet potato.[19] Studies indicated that the sweet potato genome evolved over millennia, with eventual domestication of the crop taking advantage of natural genetic modifications.[19] These observations make sweet potatoes the first known example of a naturally transgenic food crop.[19][20][21][22]: 141 [23][24]

    Cultivation

    [edit]

    See also: Sweet potato storage

    Dispersal history

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    Further information: Sweet potato cultivation in Polynesia

    Seikei Zusetsu (~1800)

    Before the arrival of Europeans to the Americas, sweet potato was grown in Polynesia, generally spread by vine cuttings rather than by seeds.[25] Sweet potato has been radiocarbon-dated in the Cook Islands to 1210–1400 CE.[26] A common hypothesis is that a vine cutting was brought to central Polynesia by Polynesians who had traveled to South America and back, and spread from there across Polynesia to Easter Island, Hawaii and New Zealand.[27][28] Genetic similarities have been found between Polynesian peoples and indigenous Americans including the Zenú, a people inhabiting the Pacific coast of present-day Colombia, indicating that Polynesians could have visited South America and taken sweet potatoes prior to European contact.[29] Dutch linguists and specialists in Amerindian languages Willem Adelaar and Pieter Muysken have suggested that the word for sweet potato is shared by Polynesian languages and languages of South America: Proto-Polynesian *kumala[30] (compare Rapa Nui kumaraHawaiian ʻualaMāori kūmara) may be connected with Quechua and Aymara k’umar ~ k’umara. Adelaar and Muysken assert that the similarity in the word for sweet potato is proof of either incidental contact or sporadic contact between the Central Andes and Polynesia.[31]

    Some researchers, citing divergence time estimates, suggest that sweet potatoes might have been present in Polynesia thousands of years before humans arrived there.[32][33] However, the present scholarly consensus favours the pre-Columbian contact model.[34][35]

    The sweet potato arrived in Europe with the Columbian exchange. It is recorded, for example, in Elinor Fettiplace’s Receipt Book, compiled in England in 1604.[36][37]

    Sweet potatoes were first introduced to the Philippines during the Spanish colonial period (1521–1898) via the Manila galleons, along with other New World crops.[38] It was introduced to the Fujian of China in about 1594 from Luzon, in response to a major crop failure. The growing of sweet potatoes was encouraged by the Governor Chin Hsüeh-tseng (Jin Xuezeng).[39]

    Sweet potatoes were also introduced to the Ryukyu Kingdom, present-day Okinawa, Japan, in the early 1600s by the Portuguese.[40][41][42] Sweet potatoes became a staple in Japan because they were important in preventing famine when rice harvests were poor.[42][43] Aoki Konyō helped popularize the cultivation of the sweet potato in Japan, and the Tokugawa bakufu sponsored, published, and disseminated a vernacular Japanese translation of his research monograph on sweet potatoes to encourage their growth more broadly.[44] Sweet potatoes were planted in Shōgun Tokugawa Yoshimune‘s private garden.[45] It was first introduced to Korea in 1764.[46] Kang P’il-ri and Yi Kwang-ryŏ embarked on a project to grow sweet potatoes in Seoul in 1766, using the knowledge of Japanese cultivators they learned in Tongnae starting in 1764. The project succeeded for a year but ultimately failed in winter 1767 after Kang’s unexpected death.[47]

    Names

    [edit]

    See also: List of sweet potato cultivars

    Although the soft, orange sweet potato is often called a “yam” in parts of North America, the sweet potato is very distinct from the botanical yam (Dioscorea), which has a cosmopolitan distribution,[48] and belongs to the monocot family Dioscoreaceae. A different crop plant, the oca (Oxalis tuberosa, a species of wood sorrel), is called a “yam” in many parts of the world.[49]

    Although the sweet potato is not closely related botanically to the common potato, they have a shared etymology. The first Europeans to taste sweet potatoes were members of Christopher Columbus‘s expedition in 1492. Later explorers found many cultivars under an assortment of local names, but the name which stayed was the indigenous Taíno name of batata. The Spanish combined this with the Quechua word for potato, papa, to create the word patata for the common potato.[50]

    Though the sweet potato is also called batata (בטטה‎) in Hebrew, this is not a direct loan of the Taíno word. Rather, the Spanish patata was loaned into Arabic as batata (بطاطا‎), owing to the lack of a /p/ sound in Arabic, while the sweet potato was called batata ḥilwa (بطاطا حلوة‎); literally (‘sweet potato’). The Arabic batata was loaned into Hebrew as designating the sweet potato only, as Hebrew had its own word for the common potato, תפוח אדמה‎ (tapuakh adama, literally ‘earth apple’; compare French pomme de terre).

    Some organizations and researchers advocate for the styling of the name as one word—sweetpotato—instead of two, to emphasize the plant’s genetic uniqueness from both common potatoes and yams and to avoid confusion of it being classified as a type of common potato.[51][52][53] In its current usage in American English, the styling of the name as two words is still preferred.[54]

    In ArgentinaColombiaVenezuelaPuerto Rico, and the Dominican Republic, the sweet potato is called batata. In Brazil, the sweet potato is called batata doce. In Mexico, BoliviaPeru, Chile, Central America, and the Philippines, the sweet potato is known as camote (alternatively spelled kamote in the Philippines), derived from the Nahuatl word camotli.[55][56] In Peru and Bolivia, the general word in Quechua for the sweet potato is apichu, but there are variants used such as khumarakumar (Ayacucho Quechua), and kumara (Bolivian Quechua),[57] strikingly similar to the Polynesian name kumara and its regional Oceanic cognates (kumalaumalaʻuala, etc.[58]), which has led some scholars to suspect an instance of pre-Columbian trans-oceanic contact.[59] This theory is also supported by genetic evidence.[60]

    In Australia, about 90% of production is devoted to the orange cultivar ‘Beauregard’,[61] which was originally[62][63] developed by the Louisiana Agricultural Experiment Station in 1981.[64]

    In New Zealand, the Māori varieties bore elongated tubers with white skin and a whitish flesh,[65] which points to pre-European cross-Pacific travel.[66] Known as kumara (from the Māori language kūmara), the most common cultivar now is the red ‘Owairaka’, but orange (‘Beauregard’), gold, purple and other cultivars are also grown.[67][68]

    Habitat

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    The plant does not tolerate frost. It grows best at an average temperature of 24 °C (75 °F), with abundant sunshine and warm nights. Annual rainfalls of 750–1,000 mm (30–39 in) are considered most suitable, with a minimum of 500 mm (20 in) in the growing season. The crop is sensitive to drought at the tuber initiation stage 50–60 days after planting, and it is not tolerant to waterlogging, which may cause tuber rots and reduce the growth of storage roots if aeration is poor.[69]

    Sweet potato sprouting “slips”
    Sweet potato harvest in Nash County, North Carolina, United States

    Depending on the cultivar and conditions, tuberous roots mature in two to nine months. With care, early-maturing cultivars can be grown as an annual summer crop in warm temperate areas, such as the Eastern United States and China. Sweet potatoes rarely flower when the daylight is longer than 11 hours, as is normal outside of the tropics. They are mostly propagated by stem or root cuttings or by adventitious shoots called “slips” that grow out from the tuberous roots during storage. True seeds are used for breeding only.[9]

    They grow well in many farming conditions and have few natural enemies; pesticides are rarely needed. Sweet potatoes are grown on a variety of soils, but well-drained, light- and medium-textured soils with a pH range of 4.5–7.0 are more favorable for the plant.[4] They can be grown in poor soils with little fertilizer. However, sweet potatoes are very sensitive to aluminium toxicity and will die about six weeks after planting if lime is not applied at planting in this type of soil.[4] As they are sown by vine cuttings rather than seeds, sweet potatoes are relatively easy to plant. As the rapidly growing vines shade out weeds, little weeding is needed. A commonly used herbicide to rid the soil of any unwelcome plants that may interfere with growth is DCPA, also known as Dacthal. In the tropics, the crop can be maintained in the ground and harvested as needed for market or home consumption. In temperate regions, sweet potatoes are most often grown on larger farms and are harvested before first frosts.[citation needed]

    Sweet potatoes are cultivated throughout tropical and warm temperate regions wherever there is sufficient water to support their growth.[70] Sweet potatoes became common as a food crop in the islands of the Pacific Ocean, South India, Uganda and other African countries.[71]

    cultivar of the sweet potato called the boniato is grown in the Caribbean; its flesh is cream-colored, unlike the more common orange hue seen in other cultivars. Boniatos are not as sweet and moist as other sweet potatoes, but their consistency and delicate flavor are different from the common orange-colored sweet potato.[citation needed]

    CountryProduction
    (millions of tonnes)
     China48.9
     Malawi6.9
     Tanzania4.4
     Angola1.7
     Ethiopia1.6
    World89.5
    Source: FAOSTAT of the United Nations[72]

    Sweet potatoes have been a part of the diet in the U.S. for most of its history, especially in the Southeast. The average per capita consumption of sweet potatoes in the United States is only about 1.5–2 kg (3.3–4.4 lb) per year, down from 13 kg (29 lb) in 1920. “Orange sweet potatoes (the most common type encountered in the US) received higher appearance liking scores compared with yellow or purple cultivars.”[73] Purple and yellow sweet potatoes were not as well liked by consumers compared to orange sweet potatoes “possibly because of the familiarity of orange color that is associated with sweet potatoes.”[73]

    In the Southeastern U.S., sweet potatoes are traditionally cured to improve storage, flavor, and nutrition, and to allow wounds on the periderm of the harvested root to heal.[74] Proper curing requires drying the freshly dug roots on the ground for two to three hours, then storage at 29–32 °C (85–90 °F) with 90 to 95% relative humidity from five to fourteen days. Cured sweet potatoes can keep for thirteen months when stored at 13–15 °C (55–59 °F) with >90% relative humidity. Colder temperatures injure the roots.[75][76]

    Production

    [edit]

    In 2020, global production of sweet potatoes was 89 million tonnes, led by China with 55% of the world total (table). Secondary producers were MalawiTanzania, and Nigeria.[72] It is the fifth most important food crop in developing countries.[77] Studies are being done to develop a salt tolerant variety to combat the effects of climate change.[77][78]

    Diseases

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    Main article: List of sweet potato diseases

    Sweet potato suffers from Sweet potato chlorotic stunt virus (a Crinivirus).[79] In synergy with other any of a large number of other viruses, Untiveros et al., 2007 finds SPCSV produces an even more severe symptomology.[79] I. batatas suffers from several Phytophthoras including P. carotovorumP. odoriferum, and P. wasabiae.[80]

    Uses

    [edit]

    Nutrition

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    Nutritional value per 100 g (3.5 oz)
    Energy378 kJ (90 kcal)
    Carbohydrates20.7 g
    Starch7.05 g
    Sugars6.5 g
    Dietary fiber3.3 g
    Fat0.15 g
    Protein2.0 g
    showVitamins and minerals
    Other constituentsQuantity
    Water75.8 g
    “Sweet potato”. USDA Database. Archived from the original on 3 April 2019. Retrieved 24 March 2021.
    Percentages estimated using US recommendations for adults,[81] except for potassium, which is estimated based on expert recommendation from the National Academies.[82]
    Nutritional value per 100 g (3.5 oz)
    Energy359 kJ (86 kcal)
    Carbohydrates20.1 g
    Starch12.7 g
    Sugars4.2 g
    Dietary fiber3 g
    Fat0.1 g
    Protein1.6 g
    showVitamins and minerals
    Other constituentsQuantity
    Water77.3 g
    “Sweet potato, raw”USDA Database. Archived from the original on 3 April 2019. Retrieved 24 March 2021.
    Percentages estimated using US recommendations for adults,[81] except for potassium, which is estimated based on expert recommendation from the National Academies.[82]

    Cooked sweet potato (baked in skin) is 76% water, 21% carbohydrates, 2% protein, and contains negligible fat (table). In a 100 gram reference amount, baked sweet potato provides 90 calories, and rich contents (20% or more of the Daily Value, DV) of vitamin A (120% DV), vitamin C (24% DV), manganese (24% DV), and vitamin B6 (20% DV). It is a moderate source (10–19% DV) of some B vitamins and potassium. Between 50% and 90% of the sugar content is sucrose.[83] Maltose content is very low, but baking can increase the maltose content from between 10% and 20%.[83]

    Sweet potato cultivars with dark orange flesh have more beta-carotene (converted to a higher vitamin A content once digested) than those with light-colored flesh, and their increased cultivation is being encouraged in Africa where vitamin A deficiency is a serious health problem.[84] Sweet potato leaves are edible and can be prepared like spinach or turnip greens.[85]

    Comparison to other food staples

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    The table below presents the relative performance of sweet potato (in column)[G] to other staple foods on a dry weight basis to account for their different water contents. While sweet potato provides less edible energy and protein per unit weight than cereals, it has higher nutrient density than cereals.[86]

    According to a study by the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization, sweet potatoes are the most efficient staple food to grow in terms of farmland, yielding approximately 70,000 kcal per hectare (28,000/acre) / day.[87]

    StapleMaize (corn)[A]Rice, white[B]Wheat[C]Potatoes[D]Cassava[E]Soybeans, green[F]Sweet potatoes[G]Yams[Y]Sorghum[H]Plantain[Z]RDA
    Water content (%)1012137960687770965
    Raw grams per 100 g dry weight111114115476250313435333110286
    Nutrient
    Energy (kJ)16981736157415331675192215651647155914608,368–10,460
    Protein (g)10.48.114.59.53.540.67.05.012.43.750
    Fat (g)5.30.81.80.40.721.60.20.63.61.144–77
    Carbohydrates (g)82918281953487938291130
    Fiber (g)8.11.514.010.54.513.113.013.76.96.630
    Sugar (g)0.70.10.53.74.30.018.21.70.042.9minimal
    Minerals[A][B][C][D][E][F][G][Y][H][Z]RDA
    Calcium (mg)832335740616130573191,000
    Iron (mg)3.010.913.673.710.6811.092.651.804.841.718
    Magnesium (mg)1412814511053203109700106400
    Phosphorus (mg)2331313312716860620418331597700
    Potassium (mg)319131417200567819381465272038514264700
    Sodium (mg)3962293547239307111,500
    Zinc (mg)2.461.243.051.380.853.091.300.800.000.4011
    Copper (mg)0.340.250.490.520.250.410.650.600.230.9
    Manganese (mg)0.541.244.590.710.951.721.131.332.3
    Selenium (μg)17.217.281.31.41.84.72.62.30.04.355
    Vitamins[A][B][C][D][E][F][G][Y][H][Z]RDA
    Vitamin C (mg)0.00.00.093.851.590.610.457.00.052.690
    Thiamin (B1) (mg)0.430.080.340.380.231.380.350.370.260.141.2
    Riboflavin (B2) (mg)0.220.060.140.140.130.560.260.100.150.141.3
    Niacin (B3) (mg)4.031.826.285.002.135.162.431.833.221.9716
    Pantothenic acid (B5) (mg)0.471.151.091.430.280.473.481.030.745
    Vitamin B6 (mg)0.690.180.341.430.230.220.910.970.861.3
    Folate Total (B9) (μg)2194476685164877063400
    Vitamin A (IU)23801010335634178460032205000
    Vitamin E, alpha-tocopherol (mg)0.540.131.160.050.480.001.131.300.000.4015
    Vitamin K1 (μg)0.30.12.29.04.80.07.88.70.02.0120
    Beta-carotene (μg)108065200369962770130610500
    Lutein+zeaxanthin (μg)150602533800000866000
    Fats[A][B][C][D][E][F][G][Y][H][Z]RDA
    Saturated fatty acids (g)0.740.200.300.140.182.470.090.130.510.40minimal
    Monounsaturated fatty acids (g)1.390.240.230.000.204.000.000.031.090.0922–55
    Polyunsaturated fatty acids (g)2.400.200.720.190.1310.000.040.271.510.2013–19
    [A][B][C][D][E][F][G][Y][H][Z]RDA

    A raw yellow dent corn
    B raw unenriched long-grain white rice
    C raw hard red winter wheat
    D raw potato with flesh and skin
    E raw cassava
    F raw green soybeans
    G raw sweet potato
    H raw sorghum
    Y raw yam
    Z raw plantains
    /* unofficial

    Culinary

    [edit]

    The starchy tuberous roots of the sweet potato are by far the most important product of the plant. In some tropical areas, the tubers are a staple food crop. The tuber is often cooked before consumption as this increases its nutrition and digestibility, although the American colonists in the Southeast ate raw sweet potatoes as a staple food.[89]

    The vines’ tips and young leaves are edible as a green vegetable with a characteristic flavor. Older growths may be used as animal fodder.[90]

    Africa

    [edit]

    A seller peeling a sweet potato in Ghana

    Amukeke (sun-dried slices of root) and inginyo (sun-dried crushed root) are a staple food for people in northeastern Uganda.[90] Amukeke is mainly served for breakfast, eaten with peanut sauce. Inginyo is mixed with cassava flour and tamarind to make atapa. People eat atapa with smoked fish cooked in peanut sauce or with dried cowpea leaves cooked in peanut sauce. Emukaru (earth-baked root) is eaten as a snack anytime and is mostly served with tea or with peanut sauce. Similar uses are also found in South Sudan.

    The young leaves and vine tips of sweet potato leaves are widely consumed as a vegetable in West African countries (Guinea, Sierra Leone and Liberia, for example), as well as in northeastern Uganda, East Africa.[90] According to FAO leaflet No. 13 – 1990, sweet potato leaves and shoots are a good source of vitamins A, C, and B2 (riboflavin), and according to research done by A. Khachatryan, are an excellent source of lutein.

    In Kenya, Rhoda Nungo of the home economics department of the Ministry of Agriculture has written a guide to using sweet potatoes in modern recipes.[91] This includes uses both in the mashed form and as flour from the dried tubers to replace part of the wheat flour and sugar in baked products such as cakes, chapatis, mandazis, bread, buns and cookies. A nutritious juice drink is made from the orange-fleshed cultivars, and deep-fried snacks are also included.

    In Egypt, sweet potato tubers are known as batata (بطاطا‎) and are a common street food in winter, when street vendors with carts fitted with ovens sell them to people passing time by the Nile or the sea.[92] The cultivars used are an orange-fleshed one as well as a white/cream-fleshed one. They are also baked at home as a snack or dessert, drenched with honey.

    In Ethiopia, the commonly found cultivars are black-skinned, cream-fleshed and called bitatis or mitatis. They are cultivated in the eastern and southern lower highlands and harvested during the rainy season (June/July). In recent years,[when?] better yielding orange-fleshed cultivars were released for cultivation by Haramaya University as a less sugary sweet potato with higher vitamin A content.[93] Sweet potatoes are widely eaten boiled as a favored snack.

    In South Africa, sweet potatoes are often eaten as a side dish such as soetpatats.

    Asia

    [edit]

    Further information: Roasted sweet potato and Sweet potato soup

    In East Asia, roasted sweet potatoes are popular street food. In China, sweet potatoes, typically yellow cultivars, are baked in a large iron drum and sold as street food during winter. In Korea, sweet potatoes, known as goguma, are roasted in a drum can, baked in foil or on an open fire, typically during winter. In Japan, a dish similar to the Korean preparation is called yaki-imo (roasted sweet potato), which typically uses either the yellow-fleshed “Japanese sweet potato” or the purple-fleshed “Okinawan sweet potato”, which is known as beni-imo.

    Sweet potato soup, served during winter, consists of sweet potato boiled in water with rock sugar and ginger. In Fujian cuisine and Taiwanese cuisine, sweet potato is often cooked with rice to make congee. Steamed and dried sweet potato is a specialty of Liancheng County. Sweet potato greens are a common side dish in Taiwanese cuisine, often boiled or sautéed and served with a garlic and soy sauce mixture, or simply salted before serving. They, as well as dishes featuring the sweet potato root, are commonly found at bento (Pe̍h-ōe-jīpiān-tong) restaurants. In northeastern Chinese cuisine, sweet potatoes are often cut into chunks and fried, before being drenched into a pan of boiling syrup.[94]

    In some regions of India, sweet potato is roasted slowly over kitchen coals at night and eaten with some dressing, while the easier way in the south is simply boiling or pressure cooking before peeling, cubing and seasoning for a vegetable dish as part of the meal. In the Indian state of Tamil Nadu, it is known as sakkara valli kilangu. It is boiled and consumed as evening snack. In some parts of India, fresh sweet potato is chipped, dried and then ground into flour; this is then mixed with wheat flour and baked into chapatti (bread). Between 15 and 20 percent of the sweet potato harvest is converted by some Indian communities into pickles and snack chips. A part of the tuber harvest is used in India as cattle fodder.[10]

    In Pakistan, sweet potato is known as shakarqandi and is cooked as a vegetable dish and also with meat dishes (chickenmutton or beef). The ash-roasted sweet potatoes are sold as a snack and street food in Pakistani bazaars especially during the winter months.[95]

    In Sri Lanka, it is called bathala, and tubers are used mainly for breakfast (boiled sweet potato is commonly served with sambal or grated coconut) or as a supplementary curry dish for rice.

    The tubers of this plant, known as kattala in Dhivehi, have been used in the traditional diet of the Maldives. The leaves were finely chopped and used in dishes such as mas huni.[96]

    Hoshi-imo, or Japanese dried sweet potatoes, a specialty of Ibaraki Prefecture, drying in Ōarai City

    In Japan, both sweet potatoes (called satsuma-imo) and true purple yams (called daijo or beni-imo) are grown. Boiling, roasting and steaming are the most common cooking methods. Also, the use in vegetable tempura is common. Daigaku-imo (ja:大学芋) is a baked and caramel-syruped sweet potato dessert. As it is sweet and starchy, it is used in imo-kinton and some other traditional sweets, such as ofukuimo. What is commonly called “sweet potato” (ja:スイートポテト) in Japan is a cake made by baking mashed sweet potatoes. Shōchū, a Japanese spirit normally made from the fermentation of rice, can also be made from sweet potato, in which case it is called imo-jōchūImo-gohan, sweet potato cooked with rice, is popular in Guangdong, Taiwan and Japan. It is also served in nimono or nitsuke, boiled and typically flavored with soy saucemirin and dashi.

    Korean japchae, or stir-fried cellophane noodles made of sweet potato starch

    In Korean cuisine, sweet potato starch is used to produce dangmyeon (cellophane noodles). Sweet potatoes are also boiled, steamed, or roasted, and young stems are eaten as namul. Pizza restaurants such as Pizza Hut and Domino’s in Korea are using sweet potatoes as a popular topping. Sweet potatoes are also used in the distillation of a variety of Soju. A popular Korean side dish or snack, goguma-mattang, also known as Korean candied sweet potato, is made by deep-frying sweet potatoes that were cut into big chunks and coating them with caramelized sugar.

    In Malaysia and Singapore, sweet potato is often cut into small cubes and cooked with taro and coconut milk (santan) to make a sweet dessert called bubur cha cha. A favorite way of cooking sweet potato is deep-frying slices of sweet potato in batter, served as a tea-time snack. In homes, sweet potatoes are usually boiled. The leaves of sweet potatoes are usually stir-fried with only garlic or with sambal belacan and dried shrimp by Malaysians.

    In the Philippines, sweet potatoes (locally known as camote or kamote) are an important food crop in rural areas. They are often a staple among impoverished families in provinces, as they are easier to cultivate and cost less than rice.[97] The tubers are boiled or baked in coals and may be dipped in sugar or syrup. Young leaves and shoots (locally known as talbos ng kamote or camote tops) are eaten fresh in salads with shrimp paste (bagoong alamang) or fish sauce. They can be cooked in vinegar and soy sauce and served with fried fish (a dish known as adobong talbos ng kamote), or with recipes such as sinigang.[97] The stew obtained from boiling camote tops is purple-colored, and is often mixed with lemon as juice. Sweet potatoes are also sold as street food in suburban and rural areas. Fried sweet potatoes coated with caramelized sugar and served in skewers (camote cue) or as French fries are popular afternoon snacks.[98] Sweet potatoes are also used in a variant of halo-halo called ginatan, where they are cooked in coconut milk and sugar and mixed with a variety of rootcrops, sagojackfruit, and bilu-bilo (glutinous rice balls).[99] Bread made from sweet potato flour is also gaining popularity. Sweet potato is relatively easy to propagate, and in rural areas can be seen abundantly at canals and dikes. The uncultivated plant is usually fed to pigs.

    In Indonesia, sweet potatoes are locally known as ubi jalar (lit: “spreading tuber”) or simply ubi and are frequently fried with batter and served as snacks with spicy condiments, along with other kinds of fritters such as fried bananas, tempeh, tahu, breadfruit, or cassava. In the mountainous regions of West Papua, sweet potatoes are the staple food among the natives there. Using the bakar batu method of cooking, rocks that have been burned in a nearby bonfire are thrown into a pit lined with leaves. Layers of sweet potatoes, an assortment of vegetables, and pork are piled on top of the rocks. The top of the pile then is insulated with more leaves, creating a pressure of heat and steam inside which cooks all food within the pile after several hours.

    In Vietnamese cuisine sweet potatoes are known as khoai lang and they are commonly cooked with a sweetener such as corn syruphoney, sugar, or molasses.[100]

    Young sweet potato leaves are also used as baby food, particularly in Southeast Asia and East Asia.[101][102] Mashed sweet potato tubers are used similarly throughout the world.[103]

    • Jjin-goguma (steamed sweet potatoes)
    • Gungoguma, roasted sweet potatoes
    • Gungoguma drum” for roasting sweet potatoes
    • Goguma-mattang (candied sweet potatoes)
    • Fried, sweetened sweet potato, India
    • Taiwanese pastry
    • Imo Jōchū (Japanese spirits made with sweet potato)
    • Chinese sweet potato soup, popular during the winter
    • Camote tops, a Philippine salad made from young sweet potato leaves (talbos ng kamote)

    United States

    [edit]

    Sweet potato fries with a vegetarian burger

    Candied sweet potatoes are a side dish consisting mainly of sweet potatoes prepared with brown sugarmarshmallowsmaple syrupmolassesorange juicemarron glacé, or other sweet ingredients. It is often served in the US on Thanksgiving. Sweet potato casserole is a side dish of mashed sweet potatoes in a casserole dish, topped with a brown sugar and pecan topping.[104]

    The sweet potato became a favorite food item of the French and Spanish settlers, thus beginning a long history of cultivation in Louisiana.[105] Sweet potatoes are recognized as the state vegetable of Alabama,[106] Louisiana,[107] and North Carolina.[108] Sweet potato pie is also a traditional favorite dish in Southern U.S. cuisine. Another variation on the typical sweet potato pie is the Okinawan sweet potato haupia pie, which is made with purple sweet potatoes.

    Sweet potato fries served at a McDonald’s restaurant

    The fried sweet potatoes tradition dates to the early nineteenth century in the United States.[109][better source needed] Sweet potato fries or chips are a common preparation and are made by julienning and deep-frying sweet potatoes in the fashion of French fried potatoes. Roasting sliced or chopped sweet potatoes lightly coated in animal or vegetable oil at high heat became common in the United States at the start of the 21st century, a dish called “sweet potato fries”. Sweet potato mash is served as a side dish, often at Thanksgiving dinner or with barbecue.

    John Buttencourt Avila is called the “father of the sweet potato industry” in North America.[110][111]

    Oceania

    [edit]

    See also: Māori cuisine and Sweet potato cultivation in Polynesia

    Māori grew several varieties of small, yellow-skinned, finger-sized kūmara (with names including taputini,[112] taroamahoepehuhutihuti, and rekamaroa[113]) that they had brought with them from east Polynesia. Modern trials have shown that these smaller varieties were capable of producing well,[114] but when American whalers, sealers and trading vessels introduced larger cultivars in the early 19th century, they quickly predominated.[115][116][117][118]

    Prior to 2021, archaeologists believed that the sweet potato failed to flourish in New Zealand south of Christchurch due to the colder climate, forcing Māori in those latitudes to become (along with the Moriori of the Chatham Islands) the only Polynesian people who subsisted solely on hunting and gathering. However, a 2021 analysis of material excavated from a site near Dunedin, some 250 km (160 mi) further south, revealed that sweet potatoes were grown and stored there during the 15th century, before the industry was disrupted by factors speculated to be due to the Little Ice Age.[34]

    Māori traditionally cooked kūmara in a hāngī (earth oven). This is still a common practice when there are large gatherings on marae.

    In 1947, black rot (Ceratocystis fimbriata) appeared in kūmara around Auckland and increased in severity through the 1950s.[119] A disease-free strain was developed by Joe and Fay Gock. They gave the strain to the nation, earning them the Bledisloe Cup in 2013.[120][121]

    There are three main cultivars of kūmara sold in New Zealand: ‘Owairaka Red’ (“red”), ‘Toka Toka Gold’ (“gold”), and ‘Beauregard’ (“orange”). The country grows around 24,000 metric tons of kūmara annually,[122] with nearly all of it (97%) grown in the Northland Region.[123] Kūmara are widely available throughout New Zealand year-round, where they are a popular alternative to potatoes.[124]

    Kūmara are often included in roast meals, and served with sour cream and sweet chili sauce.[citation needed] They are served alongside such vegetables as potatoes and pumpkin and as such, are generally prepared in a savory manner. They are ubiquitous in supermarkets, roast meal takeaway shops and hāngī.

    Drying sweet potatoes (Ribera Alta, 1951)

    Among the Urapmin people of Papua New Guinea, taro (known in Urap as ima) and the sweet potato (Urap: wan) are the main sources of sustenance, and in fact the word for ‘food’ in Urap is a compound of these two words.[125]

    Europe

    [edit]

    In the Veneto (northeast Italy), sweet potato is known as patata mericana in the Venetian language (patata americana in Italian, meaning “American potato”), and it is cultivated above all in the southern area of the region;.[126][127]

    In Spain, sweet potato is called boniato. On the evening of All Souls’ Day, in Catalonia (northeastern Spain) it is traditional to serve roasted sweet potato and chestnuts, panellets and sweet wine. The occasion is called La Castanyada.[128][129] As of 2023 Spain is the largest sweet potato producer in Europe.[130]

    South America

    [edit]

    In Peru, sweet potatoes are called camote and are frequently served alongside ceviche. Sweet potato chips are also a commonly sold snack, be it on the street or in packaged foods.[citation needed]

    Dulce de batata is a traditional Argentine, Paraguayan and Uruguayan dessert, which is made of sweet potatoes. It is a sweet jelly, which resembles a marmalade because of its color and sweetness but it has a harder texture, and has to be sliced in thin portions with a knife as if it was a pie.

    Globally

    [edit]

    Globally, sweet potatoes are now a staple ingredient of modern sushi cuisine, specifically used in maki rolls. The advent of sweet potato as a sushi ingredient is credited to chef Bun Lai of Miya’s Sushi, who first introduced sweet potato rolls in the 1990s as a plant-based alternative to traditional fish-based sushi rolls.[131][132][133]

    Molecular gastronomy

    [edit]

    Freezing a sweet potato until solid, baking at a low temperature, then increasing to a high temperature brings out the sweetness by caramelizing converted sugars.[134][135][136][137]

    Ceramics

    [edit]

    Sweet potato, Moche culture, 300 CE, Larco Museum Collection

    Ceramics modeled after sweet potatoes or camotes are often found in the Moche culture.[138]

    Dyes

    [edit]

    In South America, the juice of red sweet potatoes is combined with lime juice to make a dye for cloth. By varying the proportions of the juices, every shade from pink to black can be obtained.[139] Purple sweet potato color is also used as a natural food coloring.[140]

    Aquariums

    [edit]

    Cuttings of sweet potato vine, either edible or ornamental cultivars, will rapidly form roots in water and will grow in it, indefinitely, in good lighting with a steady supply of nutrients. For this reason, sweet potato vine is ideal for use in home aquariums, trailing out of the water with its roots submerged, as its rapid growth is fueled by toxic ammonia and nitrates, a waste product of aquatic life, which it removes from the water. This improves the living conditions for fish, which also find refuge in the extensive root systems.[citation needed]

    Ornamentals

    [edit]

    An ornamental sweet potato flower

    Ornamental sweet potatoes are popular landscape, container, and bedding plants. Grown as an annual in zones up to USDA hardiness Zone 9, they grow rapidly and spread quickly. Cultivars are available in many colors, such as green, yellow, and purple.[141] Some ornamental varieties, like ‘Blackie’, flower more than others.[142] These ornamental cultivars are not poisonous, and although the leaves are edible, the tubers do not have a good taste.

  • Bubble tea

    Bubble tea (also known as pearl milk teabubble milk teatapioca milk teaboba tea, or bobaChinese: 珍珠奶茶; pinyinzhēnzhū nǎichá, 波霸奶茶; bōbà nǎichá) is a tea-based drink most often containing chewy tapioca balls, milk, and flavouring. It originated in Taiwan in the early 1980s[1][2] and spread to other countries where there is a large East Asian diaspora population.

    Bubble tea is most commonly made with tapioca pearls (also known as “boba” or “balls”), but it can be made with other toppings as well, such as grass jellyaloe verared bean, and popping boba. It has many varieties and flavours, but the two most popular varieties are pearl black milk tea and pearl green milk tea (“pearl” for the tapioca balls at the bottom).

    Description

    A paper straw for bubble tea compared with a more typical plastic straw

    Bubble teas fall under two categories: teas without milk and milk teas. Both varieties come with a choice of blackgreen, or oolong tea as the base.[1] Milk teas usually include powdered or fresh milk, but may also use condensed milkalmond milksoy milk, or coconut milk.[3]

    The oldest known bubble tea drink consisted of a mixture of hot Taiwanese black tea, tapioca pearls (Chinese: 粉圓; pinyinfěn yuánPe̍h-ōe-jīhún-îⁿ), condensed milk, and syrup (Chinese: 糖漿; pinyintáng jiāng) or honey.[4] Bubble tea is most commonly served cold.[4] The tapioca pearls that give bubble tea its name were originally made from the starch of the cassava, a tropical shrub known for its starchy roots[5] which was introduced to Taiwan from South America during Japanese colonial rule.[6] Larger pearls (Chinese: 波霸/黑珍珠; pinyinbō bà / hēi zhēn zhū) quickly replaced these.[7]

    Some cafés specialize in bubble tea production.[8] While some cafés may serve bubble tea in a glass, most Taiwanese bubble tea shops serve the drink in a plastic cup and use a machine to seal the top of the cup with heated plastic cellophane.[9] The method allows the tea to be shaken in the serving cup and makes it spill-free until a person is ready to drink it.[10] The cellophane is then pierced with an oversized straw, referred to as a boba straw, which is larger than a typical drinking straw to allow the toppings to pass through.[11]

    Due to its popularity, bubble tea has inspired a variety of bubble tea flavoured snacks, such as bubble tea ice cream and bubble tea candy.[12] The market size of bubble tea was valued at US$2.4 billion in 2022 and is projected to reach US$4.3 billion by the end of 2027.[13][14] Some of the largest global bubble tea chains include ChatimeCoCo Fresh Tea & Juice and Gong Cha.

    Variants

    Drink

    Bubble tea comes in many variations which usually consist of black teagreen teaoolong tea, and sometimes white tea.[2] Another variation, yuenyeung, (Chinese: 鴛鴦, named after the Mandarin duck) originated in Hong Kong and consists of black tea, coffee, and milk.[1]

    Other varieties of the drink include blended tea drinks. These variations are often either blended using ice cream, or are smoothies that contain both tea and fruit.[10] Boba ice cream bars have also been produced.

    There are many popular flavours of bubble tea, such as taro,[15] mango,[16] coffee, and coconut.[17] Flavouring ingredients such as a syrup or powder determines the flavour and usually the colour of the bubble tea, while other ingredients such as tea, milk, and boba are the basis.[18]

    Toppings

    Tapioca (boba)

    Tapioca pearls (boba) are the most common ingredient, although there are other ways to make the chewy spheres found in bubble tea.[1] The pearls vary in color according to the ingredients mixed in with the tapioca. Most pearls are black from brown sugar.[2][19]

    Jelly comes in different shapes: small cubes, stars, or rectangular strips, and flavours such as coconut jellykonjaclycheegrass jellymangocoffee, and green teaAzuki bean or mung bean paste, typical toppings for Taiwanese shaved ice desserts, give bubble tea an added subtle flavour as well as texture. Aloe, egg pudding (custard), and sago also can be found in many bubble tea shops.[10][20] Popping boba, or spheres that have fruit juices or syrups inside them, are another popular bubble tea topping.[21] Flavours include mango, strawberry, coconut, kiwi, and honey melon.[21][22]

    Some shops offer milk or cheese foam on top of the drink, giving the drink a consistency similar to that of whipped cream, and a saltier flavour profile.[23] One shop described the effect of the cheese foam as “neutraliz[ing] the bitterness of the tea…and as you drink it you taste the returning sweetness of the tea.”[24]

    Ice and sugar level

    Bubble tea packaged in a promotional shape (lightbulb) instead of a takeaway cup[25]

    Bubble tea shops often give customers the option of choosing the amount of ice or sugar in their drink.[26] Ice levels are usually specified ordinally (e.g., no ice, less ice, normal ice, more ice), and sugar levels in quarterly intervals (e.g., 0%, 25%, 50%, 75%, 100%).[26]

    Packaging

    In Southeast Asia, bubble tea is usually packaged in a plastic takeaway cup, sealed with plastic or a rounded cap. New entrants into the market have attempted to distinguish their products by packaging it in bottles[27] and other shapes.[28] Some have used sealed plastic bags.[29] Nevertheless, the plastic takeaway cup with a sealed cap is still the most common packaging method.

    Preparation method

    The tea can be made in batches during the day or the night before. Brewing different types of teas take different amounts of time and temperature. For instance, green tea requires brewing at a lower temperature, typically between 176–185 °F (80–85 °C) with a brewing time of 8–10 minutes to extract its optimal flavour. In contrast, black tea needs to be made with hotter water, usually around 203–212 °F (95–100 °C) with a brewing of around 15–20 minutes to bring out its sweetness. A tea warmer dispenser allows the tea to remain heated for up to eight hours.

    Pearls (boba) are made from tapioca starch. Most bubble tea stores buy packaged tapioca pearls in an uncooked stage. When the boba is uncooked and in the package, it is uncolored and hard. The boba does not turn chewy and dark until they are cooked and sugar is added to bring out its taste. Uncooked tapioca pearls in their package can be stored for around 9 to 12 months. Once cooked, they can be stored in a sealed container in the refrigerator. Despite this, most bubble tea stores will not sell their boba after 24 hours because it will start to harden and lose its chewiness.

    The traditional preparation method is to mix the ingredients (sugar, powders, and other flavourings) together using a bubble tea shaker cup, by hand. However, many present-day bubble tea shops use a bubble tea shaker machine. This eliminates the need for humans to shake the bubble tea by hand. It also reduces staffing needs as multiple cups of bubble tea may be prepared by a single barista.

    History

    Milk and sugar have been added to tea in Taiwan since the Dutch colonization of Taiwan from 1624–1662.[1]

    Before the invention of bubble tea, a similar tea beverage was created in Taiwan called bubble foam tea (Chinese: 泡沫紅茶; pinyinPàomò hóngchá). This drink was made by mixing tea with fructose syrup[failed verification] and then shaking it with ice cubes in a shaker. The vigorous shaking created a fine foam, giving the drink its signature texture. Unlike modern pearl milk tea, bubble foam tea did not initially contain tapioca balls.[30][better source needed]

    There are two competing stories for the discovery of bubble tea.[7] One is associated with the Chun Shui Tang tea room in Taichung.[1] Its founder, Liu Han-Chieh, began serving Chinese tea cold after he observed coffee was served cold in Japan while on a visit in the 1980s.[1] The new style of serving tea propelled his business and multiple chains serving this tea were established.[7] The company’s product development manager, Lin Hsiu Hui, said she created the first bubble tea in 1988 when she poured tapioca balls into her tea during a staff meeting and encouraged others to drink it.[7] The beverage was well received at the meeting, leading to its inclusion on the menu. It ultimately became the franchise’s top-selling product.[7]

    Another claim for the invention of bubble tea comes from the Hanlin Tea Room (Chinese: 翰林茶館; pinyinHànlín cháguǎn) in Tainan. It claims that bubble tea was invented in 1986 when teahouse owner Tu Tsong-he was inspired by white tapioca balls he saw in the local market of Yā-mǔ-liáo (Chinese: 鴨母寮).[7] He later made tea using these traditional Taiwanese snacks.[7] This resulted in what is known as “pearl tea.”[31]

    Popularity

    In the 1990s, bubble tea spread across East and Southeast Asia with its ever-growing popularity. In regions like Hong Kong, mainland ChinaJapanVietnam,[32] and Singapore, the bubble tea trend expanded rapidly among young people. In some popular shops, people would line up for more than thirty minutes to get a drink.[2] In recent years, the popularity of bubble tea has gone beyond the beverage itself, with boba lovers inventing various bubble tea flavoured-foods, including ice creampizzatoastsushi, and ramen.[12]

    Taiwan

    In Taiwan, bubble tea has become not just a beverage, but an enduring icon of the culture and food history for the nation.[7][33] In 2020, the date April 30 was officially declared as National Bubble Tea Day in Taiwan.[2] That same year, the image of bubble tea was proposed as an alternative cover design for Taiwan’s passport.[34] According to Al Jazeera, bubble tea has become synonymous with Taiwan and is an important symbol of Taiwanese identity both domestically and internationally.[35] Bubble tea is used to represent Taiwan in the context of the Milk Tea Alliance.[36][35] 50 Lan is a bubble tea chain founded in Tainan.[37]

    Hong Kong

    Hong Kong is famous for its traditional Hong Kong–style milk tea, which is made with brewed black tea and evaporated milk.[1] While milk tea has long become integrated into people’s daily life, the expansion of Taiwanese bubble tea chains, including Tiger Sugar, Youiccha, and Xing Fu Tang, into Hong Kong created a new wave for “boba tea.”[4]

    Mainland China

    Since the idea of adding tapioca pearls into milk tea was introduced into China in the 1990s, bubble tea has increased in popularity.[38] In 2020 it was estimated that the consumption of bubble tea was 5 times that of coffee in recent years.[38] According to data from QianZhen Industry Research Institute, the value of the tea-related beverage market in China reached 53.7 billion Renminbi (about US$7.63 billion) in 2018.[39] In 2019, annual sales from bubble tea shops reached as high as CN¥ 140.5 billion (roughly US$20 billion).[40] While bubble tea chains from Taiwan (e.g., Gong Cha and Coco) are still popular, more local brands, like Yi Dian Dian, NayukiHey Tea, etc., are now dominating the market.[39]

    In China, young people’s growing obsession with bubble tea shaped their way of social interaction. Buying someone a cup of bubble tea has become a new way of informally thanking someone. It is also a favoured topic among friends and on social media.[39]

    Japan

    Bubble tea first entered Japan by the late 1990s, but it failed to leave a lasting impression on the public markets.[41] It was not until the 2010s when the bubble tea trend finally swept Japan.[41] Shops from Taiwan, Korea, and China, as well as local brands, began to pop up in cities, and bubble tea has remained one of the hottest trends since then.[41] 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.[41] A bubble tea theme park was open for a limited time in 2019 in HarajukuTokyo.[42]

    Singapore

    Known locally in Chinese as 泡泡茶 (pinyinpào pào chá), bubble tea is loved by many in Singapore.[43] The drink was sold in Singapore as early as 1992 and became phenomenally popular among young people in 2001.[44] This soon ended because of the intense competition and price wars among shops.[45] As a result, most bubble tea shops closed and bubble tea lost its popularity by 2003.[45] When Taiwanese chains like Koi and Gong Cha came to Singapore in 2007 and 2009, the beverage experienced only short resurgences in popularity.[46] In 2018, the interest in bubble tea rose again at an unprecedented speed in Singapore, as new brands like The Alley and Tiger Sugar entered the market; social media also played an important role in driving this renaissance of bubble tea.[46]

    United States

    Taiwanese immigrants introduced bubble tea to the United States in the 1990s, initially in California through regions including Los Angeles County.[47] Some of the first stand-alone bubble tea shops can be traced to a food court in Arcadia, in Southern California,[47] and Fantasia Coffee & Tea in Cupertino, in Northern California.[48] Chains like Tapioca Express, Quickly, Lollicup, and Happy Lemon emerged in the late 1990s and early 2000s, bringing the Taiwanese bubble tea trend to the US.[48] Within the Asian American community, bubble tea is commonly known under its colloquial term “boba.”[4]

    As the beverage gained popularity in the US, it gradually became more than a drink, but a cultural identity for Asian Americans. This phenomenon was referred to as “boba life” by Chinese-American brothers Andrew and David Fung in their music video, “Bobalife,” released in 2013.[4] Boba symbolizes a subculture that Asian Americans as social minorities could define themselves as, and “boba life” is a reflection of their desire for both cultural and political recognition.[49] It is also used disparagingly in the term boba liberal, a term that derides mainstream Asian-American liberalism.[50][51] Other regions with large concentrations of bubble tea restaurants in the United States are the Northeast and Southwest. This is reflected in the coffeehouse-style teahouse chains that originate from the regions, such as Boba Tea Company from AlbuquerqueNew Mexico, No. 1 Boba Tea in Las VegasNevada, and Kung Fu Tea from New York City.[52][53] Albuquerque and Las Vegas have a large concentrations of boba tea restaurants, as the drink is popular especially among the HispanoNavajoPueblo, and other Native AmericanHispanic and Latino American communities in the Southwest.[54][55][56][57]

    A massive shipping and supply chain crisis on the U.S. West coast, coupled with the obstruction of the Suez Canal in March 2021, caused a shortage of tapioca pearls for bubble tea shops in the U.S. and Canada.[58][59] Most of the tapioca consumed in the U.S. is imported from Asia, since the critical ingredient, tapioca starch, is mostly grown in Asia.[60]

    TikTok trends and the Korean Wave also fueled the popularity of bubble tea in the United States.[61]

    Vietnam

    Taiwanese milk tea was introduced to Vietnam in the early 2000s,[62] but it took a few years for this drink to become popular with young people. Roadside stalls and carts rarely served milk tea, and the milk tea trend gradually cooled down in the late 2000s. Many shops had to liquidate or close, while others struggled to survive. Bubble tea also gained controversy because of information about tea of unknown origin, tapioca pearls allegedly being made from polymer plastics, etc.

    By 2012, Taiwanese brands arrived in Vietnam, still the same old milk tea but served in a completely new style: milk tea with toppings, developing a chain model, and a space designed as well as any famous coffee shop. Also, the halo of Taiwanese milk tea gradually returned, especially around the end of 2016, to the beginning of 2017.[63] According to a survey by Lozi, in 2017, the Vietnamese milk tea market witnessed an explosion with 100 large and small brands coexisting and over 1,500 points of sale, including major brands from Taiwan such as Ding Tea, Gong Cha, BoBaPop.[64] This survey also shows that milk tea is becoming a popular drink in Vietnam when 53% of people are confirmed to drink milk tea at least once a week.[65]

    From the consumer perspective, milk tea is characterized by its sweet, creamy taste, suitable for many customers, not only students, but also children and office workers.[66][67] In addition, milk tea is constantly “transforming” to meet all customer needs, from cheese cream tea, fruit tea to low-fat tea. Another important point that makes milk tea popular is the service style. Instead of small shops and school gate carts like in the past, the milk tea is designed into a spacious space, with fixed seats, and cool air conditioning.[68]

    Korea

    Milk tea is not only a daily drink, but it has also become a “fever drink” loved in many countries, including South Korea. In the capital Seoul alone, there are 4 famous milk tea shops, which are popular places for entertainment, dating, and meeting of Korean youth every weekend, which are Gong Cha, Cofioca, Amasvin, and Happy Lemon.

    In Korea, there are many different large and small milk tea shops, famous brands or just small shops with a drink counter and a table. Although pearl milk tea originated in Taiwan, it took certain changes in Korea. Koreans are very concerned about keeping in shape, every meal they have to check exactly how many calories they take in, so that they can do appropriate exercises to burn off excess fat. Therefore, when entering restaurants or bakeries in Korea, we will see the calorie index recorded very carefully as a way to protect the health of consumers. For example, at Gong Cha milk tea shops there, customers can choose the sweetness of their milk tea by choosing the sugar level (0%, 30%, 50%, 70%, and 100%) and similarly choose ice to add personal favourite flavour to their milk tea.[69]

    Australia

    Individual bubble tea shops began to appear in Australia in the 1990s, along with other regional drinks like Eis Cendol. Chains of stores were established as early as 2002, when the Bubble Cup franchise opened its first store in Melbourne. Although originally associated with the rapid growth of immigration from Asia and the vast tertiary student cohort from Asia, in Melbourne and Sydney bubble tea has become popular across many communities.[70]

    Mauritius

    The first bubble tea shop in Mauritius opened in late 2012, and since then there have been bubble tea shops in most shopping malls on the island. Bubble tea shops have become a popular place for teenagers to hang out.[71]

    Cultural influence

    In 2020, the Unicode Consortium released the bubble tea emoji (U+1F9CB 🧋 BUBBLE TEA) as part of its version 13.0 update.[72][73]

    On 29 January 2023, Google celebrated Bubble Tea with a doodle.[74][75]

    Potential health concerns

    In July 2019, Singapore’s Mount Alvernia Hospital warned against the high sugar content of bubble tea since the drink had become extremely popular in Singapore. While it acknowledged the benefits of drinking green tea and black tea in reducing risk of cardiovascular diseasediabetesarthritis, and cancer, respectively, the hospital cautions that the addition of other ingredients like non-dairy creamer and toppings in the tea could raise the fat and sugar content of the tea and increase the risk of chronic diseases. Non-dairy creamer is a milk substitute that contains trans fat in the form of hydrogenated palm oil. The hospital warned that this oil has been strongly correlated with an increased risk of heart disease and stroke.[76][77]

    The other concern about bubble tea is its high calorie content, partially attributed to the high-carbohydrate tapioca pearls (Chinese: 珍珠; pinyinzhēn zhū), which can make up to half the calorie-count in a 500 ml (18 imp fl oz; 17 US fl oz) serving of bubble tea.