Serve something inspired for your next party -- serve bubble tea!

Bubble Tea Kits - $12.00 each (in store only)

This is perfect for homes, parties, and as a gift.

Introducing VIP card to our loyal customers

– Please come in and find out the details

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Bubble Maineia is Portland's first Taiwanese Bubble Tea Store. We offer bubble milk tea, fruit ice tea, fruit and tea favor slush, and more....(Checkout our menu)

"It's different", gives bubble tea an edge.

Bubble tea is innovative and exciting. It's definitely a fun experience.
What other drink gives you something to chew on? 
The most popular ones are regular milk tea, strawberry, mango and taro.

Tea is good for your health!!!

Bubble tea is the latest addition to the American diet. Some consider it the healthy alternative to coffee.

  • Tea is healthier than coffee, even the tapioca pearls are a healthful component made from cassava roots which actually supply modest but significant amounts of iron and calcium.
  • Did you know that drip coffee has 3 times as much caffeine as in a cup of black tea?
  • Green tea has the least caffeine, and is gaining popularity for its cancer reducing benefits.

What is bubble tea?

Bubble tea is black or green tea mixed with cream and sugar. The large and chewy tapioca balls are the "bubbles" in bubble tea. Syrups and flavored powders are also added to create a variety of sweet flavors. They are served in clear plastic cups with a fat half-inch-diameter straw.

The joy of tasting a visually and sensually unique beverage is an important part of bubble tea. Tapioca pearls provide texture to the drink. The consistency of tapioca pearls is somewhere between gelatin and gummy candy. The pearls usually are the size of marbles, hence the exceptionally large straw. When you take your first sip, the tapioca pearls slowly roll up the straw, assembly-line style, and raid your entire mouth.

Contemporary bubble tea traces its roots back to Taiwan. Legend has it that a particular tea establishment attracted young customers by combining fruit juices with chilled tea. The concept proved to be such a success that in a short time the drink became ubiquitous throughout Taiwan.

But where did the tea-with-milk idea come from? Asians traditionally drink their teas plain - without milk, without sugar. This practice stems from European countries most notably England, famous for its afternoon tea times.

Over the years, this drink has evolved into many sophisticated incarnations, enticing veteran bubble tea drinkers and novices alike - even people who don't like tea. Most bubble tea shop also sell smoothie-type drinks with tapioca, milk shakes with tapioca, clear teas with fruit syrups and tapioca, and milk tea with flavored jelly instead of tapioca. You can even get your bubble tea without the "bubbles" - or hot, if you like