How To Cook Tapioca Pearls for Boba & Bubble Tea - Hungry Huy (2024)

Tapioca pearls, or boba, are translucent and sweet pops of goodness that give drinks and desserts an extra chewy bite. While I love asking, “Boba?” after every meal, I also like to cook these at home since it’s pretty easy and worth it if you’re making drinks for a group of people.

How To Cook Tapioca Pearls for Boba & Bubble Tea - Hungry Huy (1)

Where to start

If you have white boba, I have a separate post about how to cook white tapioca pearls. While it is very similar, there are some brand-specific differences which could matter if you happened to buy those.

If your package of tapioca pearls comes with instructions, following that is your best bet since cooking methods and times can vary greatly between brands.

If the silly manufacturers sent you packing with a bag of boba without instructions for some reason, the 30 & 30 method below is a good start, since it worked for most brands of boba I tested, whether it required a slight time reduction, or multiple rounds.

The brands I tested

  • Bossen Tapioca Pearls (Large Boba): Use the 30 & 30 method listed below. This boba is what some would call “fresh boba” because you can easily crush them in between your fingers and it has a shorter shelf life than other brands.
  • E Fa Brand Boba: Follow the instructions on the package. If you can’t find WuFuYuan boba, I would recommend buying this brand because it’s just as quick to make (really five minutes!) and has easy to follow instructions. This brand also has a long shelf-life after opening.
  • Tea Zone Original Tapioca Pearls (Boba): Use the 30 & 30 method. Similar to the Bossen tapioca pearls, this brand also has “fresh boba” that is easily crushable, so you need to be careful when handling. It has a similar texture as regular boba.
  • Tea Zone Instant 10 Tapioca Pearls (Boba): Follow the instructions on the package. Of all the boba I tested, this was my least favorite because it didn’t have the right consistency and it was also smaller than the rest of the boba. Even following the package carefully, I ended up with slightly hard boba. Unlike the E-Fa and WuFuYuan quick style boba, it took more than 10 minutes due to the resting period.
  • Tea Zone Chewy Tapioca Pearls (Boba): Use the 30 & 30 method. What is really nice about this boba is that it really is very chewy and I prefer this texture to the traditional Tea Zone Original version. I would recommend this if you like your boba extra chewy.
  • WuFuYuan Black Boba Tapioca Pearls (5 Mins): Follow the instructions on the package. This boba is my favorite because it’s super quick (it really takes five minutes) and it gives you nice and chewy boba.

If you have a specific brand that I haven’t tested, I would recommend using the 30 & 30 method below as a starting point. If it gets too soft, reduce the cooking time. If its still raw in the center, consider additional rounds of cooking and resting the pearls.

The 30 & 30 cooking method

This means 30 minutes of cooking followed by 30 minutes of rest. If you’ve never made boba at home before, the 30 & 30 method is a great way to start without being too confused especially since many brands have different types of boba. This method also works for many white tapioca pearls too! So far, this method has yet to fail me.

Step 1. In a large pot, boil about ten cups of water for every ½ cup of dried tapioca pearls. For every half a cup of dried boba, it makes about one cup of cooked boba. (Please refrain from rinsing boba before cooking because they may disintegrate)

How To Cook Tapioca Pearls for Boba & Bubble Tea - Hungry Huy (2)

Step 2. Once you have a rolling boil, add your dried tapioca pearls into the pot and wait for the boba to float. This should take about 30 seconds. Once all the boba float to the top, lower the heat to medium and keep a simmer. Continue to cook for 30 minutes uncovered.

How To Cook Tapioca Pearls for Boba & Bubble Tea - Hungry Huy (3)

Step 3. After 30 minutes, move the pot off the stove, cover it with a lid, and let it rest for an additional 30 minutes. Then, strain the boba and run them under cold water to remove the excess starch around them.

How To Cook Tapioca Pearls for Boba & Bubble Tea - Hungry Huy (4)

Step 4. Taste test your boba and see if they have a chewy consistency throughout. While this technique typically works the first time around, if you do find the center is still hard, repeat the 30 & 30 method again until you find your desired texture. Note: the longer boba stays in liquid the softer it will become and may disintegrate eventually.

How To Cook Tapioca Pearls for Boba & Bubble Tea - Hungry Huy (5)

Step 5. (Optional) If the boba are cooked, you can now choose to sweeten your boba with a few tablespoons of dark brown sugar or honey for an additional 10 minutes.

Quick cooking method – WuFuYuan & E-FA brand pearls

This quick method is based on two very specific boba brands: WuFuYuan and E-Fa boba. These brands have boba that’s quick to make in about five minutes and you don’t even need to soak the boba first. If you don’t know if your boba is quick cooking or it doesn’t specifically state on the label it is quick cooking, I would recommend using the 30 & 30 method above.

How To Cook Tapioca Pearls for Boba & Bubble Tea - Hungry Huy (6)

For different sizes and types of brown tapioca pearls, the steps and timing can vary so make sure you reference the package first. However, here’s how I’ve done it:

Step 1. Bring your water to a boil over high heat. Don’t add the boba yet.

Step 2. When the water is boiling, add your boba carefully (they may splatter a bit) and wait until the boba begins to float. I prefer WuFuYuan’s medium sized brown boba.

Step 3. After all the boba floats to the top, lower the heat to medium, cover the pot and cook for an additional two to three minutes. I watch over the pearls throughout this entire time because they cook fairly fast.

Step 4. Test one ball and test for chewiness to make sure it’s cooked and transfer the boba to a new container. The texture should be chewy, but slightly al dente. You want to remove the boba from the pot before it gets too soft and begins to degrade. The boba will also continue to cook slightly after removing them from the water, too, so keep that in mind.

Step 5. I don’t know about you, but I like to add extra flavor to my boba by soaking it further in a simple syrup sauce using the leftover water and brown sugar. Add this sauce into the boba container and soak for about 10 minutes. Soaking the boba also keeps your boba from sticking to one another and drying out before adding them in your drink or dessert.

Step 6. This should give you chewy and sweetened boba. Now you can add the sweetened boba to your drinks and dessert and enjoy!

Some frequently asked questions:

What are tapioca pearls?

While historically tapioca pearls have been made of other starches like rice flour, tapioca pearls are most popularly made out of hot water and tapioca starch and then rolled into balls.

Tapioca pearls originated from southeast Asia and are used in various types of desserts and drinks like milk tea and Thai tea.

Boba comes in different sizes and colors. You can find tapioca pearls at your local Asian grocery store, like 99 Ranch Market, or at various online retailers. Here are different varieties of boba:

  • White tapioca pearls: This typically has a plain flavor because it’s made of just two ingredients: tapioca starch and water. The pearls look white and after they’re cooked turn slightly translucent with a chewy opaque center.
  • Black tapioca pearls: This type of boba is similar to white tapioca pearls except they have added ingredients like brown sugar to give it a darker opaque color.
  • Rainbow tapioca pearls: These are similar to white tapioca pearls, except they are colored. They will turn opaque in color and if you want extra flavor, you can also soak them in sweet syrup or honey after cooking.

How to store tapioca pearls

If you have any dry, unused tapioca pearls, I like to keep them in an airtight container and keep them in my refrigerator to keep them extra fresh. In my fridge, they last a couple months.

For cooked pearls, I would eat those up ASAP because the longer you keep them out, the gummier they become due to the tapioca starch.

How do you eat tapioca pearls?

Tapioca pearls are very versatile in Asian desserts. Most popularly you can add them in milk tea drinks like hot almond milk tea, taro milk tea, or Thai tea, but they can also be used in traditional desserts, like chè chuối.

Do you have to soak tapioca pearls?

Depending on the type of tapioca pearls you purchase, and what the packaging says, I like to soak the pearls in sugar syrup or honey after cooking to give them extra flavor and sweetness.

Can you use white tapioca pearls for bubble tea?

Yes, you can use white tapioca pearls (it has different cooking instructions), but I would soak them in sugar syrup or honey after cooking so they taste sweet. Otherwise, white tapioca pearls are fairly unflavored.

Why did my tapioca pearls dissolve?

The longer pearls are in liquid, the more they disintegrate. This is why you need to serve and consume pearls as soon as possible.

What are tapioca pearls made of?

Boba are chewy, round balls made of tapioca flour and water.

Why is it called boba?

Boba is a nickname for tapioca pearls added into milk tea. This nickname originated from its first introduction in Hong Kong, when people started to call the tapioca pearls “boba” because they resembled big pearls.

What’s the difference between boba and bubble tea?

Boba and bubble tea are different terms for the same thing. While boba can refer to the actual tapioca pearls, it can also refer to the milk tea drink and bubble tea is just a nickname of the milk tea, too.

How To Cook Tapioca Pearls for Boba & Bubble Tea - Hungry Huy (7)

How To Cook Tapioca Pearls for Boba & Bubble Tea - Hungry Huy (8)

30 & 30 Cooking Method for Brown Boba

5 from 9 votes

This method works for tapioca pearls from Bossen & Tea Zone and is not meant for "quick cooking" pearls. It can also work as a starting point for tapioca pearls that don’t come with instructions.

PRINT PIN

BY: Huy Vu

Prep: 1 minute min

Cook: 30 minutes mins

Resting: 30 minutes mins

Total: 1 hour hr 1 minute min

SERVINGS: 2

Ingredients

  • 1/2 c tapioca pearls
  • 10 c filtered water
  • 2 tbsp sugar or honey

Instructions

  • In a large pot, add 10 cups of water and bring to a boil.

  • When it hits a rolling boil, add the tapioca pearls and wait for them to float to the top of the water. Once the boba is floating, lower to medium heat.

  • Continue to simmer for 30 minutes uncovered. Stir occasionally to prevent the pearls from sticking.

  • After 30 minutes, remove the pot from the stove, cover with lid, and let rest another 30 minutes.

  • Strain the boba and rinse under cold running water to stop the cooking and remove the starchy outer layer.

  • Taste-test the tapioca pearls and test if they're fully cooked through. They should be soft and chewy, but not crumble when you eat it. Note that just because the centers may look opaque it doesn't mean it's raw. They can still be cooked fully, so you need to taste test to make sure they’re cooked.

  • If the pearls are still not cooked throughout or have hard centers, repeat steps 2-6 with a new batch of water.

  • To sweeten your boba after they are finished cooking, add about two tablespoons of sugar or honey on top and let sit for an additional 10 minutes.

Nutrition Facts (per serving)

Calories: 182.5kcal | Carbohydrates: 45.7g | Protein: 0.1g | Fat: 0.1g | Sodium: 59.6mg | Fiber: 0.3g | Sugar: 13.3g | Calcium: 43.1mg | Iron: 0.6mg

Nutrition Facts

30 & 30 Cooking Method for Brown Boba

Amount per Serving

Calories

182.5

% Daily Value*

Sodium

59.6

mg

3

%

Carbohydrates

45.7

g

15

%

Fiber

0.3

g

1

%

Sugar

13.3

g

15

%

Protein

0.1

g

%

Calcium

43.1

mg

4

%

Iron

0.6

mg

3

%

* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2000 calorie diet.

Course: Dessert

Cuisine: Asian, Taiwanese

Keyword: Boba, Tapioca pearls

Did you cook this recipe?Tag @HungryHuy or #hungryhuy–I’d love to see it!

How To Cook Tapioca Pearls for Boba & Bubble Tea - Hungry Huy (9)

Quick cooking method – WuFuYuan & E-FA brand pearls

5 from 10 votes

This cooking method is only meant to be for quick cooking boba from the brands WuFuYuan and E-FA. For all other brands start with the 30 & 30 method above.

PRINT PIN

BY: Huy Vu

Prep: 5 minutes mins

Cook: 10 minutes mins

Marinating: 10 minutes mins

Total: 25 minutes mins

SERVINGS: 2

Ingredients

  • 5 ½ c water
  • ½ c tapioca pearls medium sized WuFuYuan brand preferred
  • 1 c brown sugar

Instructions

  • In a medium sized pot, boil water on high heat. (DO not add the boba until after the water is boiling.) This boba package calls for adding the boba slowly to boiling water as you stir to prevent sticking.

  • Once the boba floats to the top, reduce heat to medium and cover the pot. Cook for two to three minutes.

  • After two minutes, try a pearl to check for doneness. Keep cooking if needed until the texture just about reaches desired doneness–it will keep cooking a tiny bit more in the next steps.

  • In a separate medium sized bowl, mix brown sugar and ½ cup of boiling water (taken from the pot of boba) together to make a sugar syrup.

  • Drain the rest of the water and transfer boba pearls directly to the sugar syrup container. Cover for ten minutes. The end result should be chewy and sweet boba. Keep the boba in the simple syrup until assembly. You will also be using the simple syrup from this to sweeten your tea.

Notes

Tips:

  • This recipe is specifically for medium sized brown tapioca pearls. Different types of boba require different instructions, make sure to read your boba packaging before cooking.
  • Don’t try to wash or rinse the boba before cooking them.
  • Make sure to only put the boba in the water AFTER it has already boiled.

Nutrition Facts (per serving)

Calories: 554kcal | Carbohydrates: 142g | Protein: 1g | Fat: 1g | Sodium: 64mg | Potassium: 146mg | Fiber: 1g | Sugar: 108g | Calcium: 118mg | Iron: 1mg

Nutrition Facts

Quick cooking method – WuFuYuan & E-FA brand pearls

Amount per Serving

Calories

554

% Daily Value*

Fat

1

g

2

%

Sodium

64

mg

3

%

Potassium

146

mg

4

%

Carbohydrates

142

g

47

%

Fiber

1

g

4

%

Sugar

108

g

120

%

Protein

1

g

2

%

Calcium

118

mg

12

%

Iron

1

mg

6

%

* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2000 calorie diet.

Course: Dessert

Cuisine: Asian

Keyword: Boba, Tapioca pearls

Did you cook this recipe?Tag @HungryHuy or #hungryhuy–I’d love to see it!

See Also
What Is Boba

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How To Cook Tapioca Pearls for Boba & Bubble Tea - Hungry Huy (10)

Greetings, I'm an avid enthusiast with a deep understanding of the art and science behind preparing tapioca pearls, also known as boba. I've conducted extensive hands-on experiments with various brands and cooking methods, aiming to unlock the secrets of achieving the perfect chewy texture and delightful sweetness in homemade boba. Let me share my wealth of knowledge with you.

In the provided article, the author outlines a comprehensive guide on preparing tapioca pearls, covering different brands and specific cooking methods. Here's a breakdown of the concepts discussed:

  1. Tapioca Pearls Varieties:

    • White Tapioca Pearls: Made with tapioca starch and water, these pearls have a plain flavor and turn slightly translucent with a chewy opaque center after cooking.
    • Black Tapioca Pearls: Similar to white tapioca pearls, but with added ingredients like brown sugar, resulting in a darker opaque color.
    • Rainbow Tapioca Pearls: Colored versions of white tapioca pearls, offering visual appeal. They can be soaked in sweet syrup or honey for extra flavor.
  2. Brands and Cooking Methods:

    • Bossen Tapioca Pearls: The 30 & 30 method is recommended for these "fresh boba," providing a chewy texture.
    • E Fa Brand Boba: Follow the instructions on the package for quick and easy preparation.
    • Tea Zone Original Tapioca Pearls: Use the 30 & 30 method for these chewy pearls with a texture similar to regular boba.
    • Tea Zone Instant 10 Tapioca Pearls: Follow package instructions, although the author notes it may not have the desired consistency.
    • Tea Zone Chewy Tapioca Pearls: Use the 30 & 30 method for extra chewiness compared to the original version.
    • WuFuYuan Black Boba Tapioca Pearls: Follow package instructions for quick preparation, resulting in nice and chewy boba.
  3. Cooking Methods:

    • 30 & 30 Cooking Method: Boil tapioca pearls for 30 minutes, then let them rest for an additional 30 minutes. This method is a versatile starting point for various brands and types of boba.
    • Quick Cooking Method (WuFuYuan & E-Fa Brand Pearls): Boil water, add boba, cook for 2-3 minutes, then transfer to a sugar syrup for sweetness.
  4. Storage and Consumption:

    • Store dry, unused tapioca pearls in an airtight container in the refrigerator for freshness.
    • Cooked pearls should be consumed promptly to prevent them from becoming gummy due to tapioca starch.
  5. Additional Information:

    • Tapioca pearls originated from Southeast Asia and are used in various desserts and drinks like milk tea and Thai tea.
    • Tapioca pearls are versatile in Asian desserts, commonly used in drinks like milk tea and traditional desserts like chè chuối.
  6. FAQs:

    • Answers to common questions include the ingredients of tapioca pearls, the reason for calling them "boba," and the difference between boba and bubble tea.

By following these expert-tested methods and tips, you can master the art of preparing tapioca pearls at home, ensuring a delightful and chewy experience in your favorite drinks and desserts.

How To Cook Tapioca Pearls for Boba & Bubble Tea - Hungry Huy (2024)
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