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Cheese tea

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Tea-based drink
Cheese tea
Alternative namesNaigai cha
CourseDrink
Place of originTaiwan
Serving temperatureCold
Main ingredientsBrewedtea,sugar,salt,cream cheese,cream,condensed milk

Cheese tea, also known asnaigai cha,[1] is a beverage consisting of fruity, layerediced teas topped with a pillow of salted, whippedcream cheese. Originating inTaiwan and popularized byHey Tea inChina, the drink has since expanded to other regions, including Asia, the United States, Australia, and the United Kingdom.

Description

[edit]

Cheese tea consists of cold[2][3]green orblack tea topped with a layer ofcream cheese blended withcream orcondensed milk, creating a cap that can be either sweet or slightly salty.[4] The drink can be sprinkled with salt.[3]

Food writerTammie Teclemariam, describing a cheese tea she sampled, observed, "There was a Creamsicle-like appeal to the combination of dairy and medium-sweet fruit, but I didn’t quite know what to make of a drink that seemed like equal parts bubble tea, Slurpee, and Frappuccino."[5]

Writing forThe Guardian,Tim Jonze described the beverage's "cheese" aspect as slightly misleading, opining that it is rather "a velvety, mascarpone-like foam that has been whisked with sugar and salt before being allowed to float atop your tea," and noting that "the whole thing looks not dissimilar to a pint of beer."[1]

History

[edit]

Cheese tea emerged inTaiwan’s night markets around 2010, where vendors created a foamy, tangy topping by blendingpowdered cheese and salt withwhipping cream and milk over cold tea. By 2012, the trend had spread to China’sGuangdong province, where the founders of Chinese tea drink chainHey Tea refined the concept by replacing powdered ingredients with real cream cheese and fresh milk, developing a more premium version of the savory and salty topping.[3] Hey Tea is widely recognized for introducing the beverage in China before expanding to other parts of Asia (including Hong Kong, Singapore, and Malaysia),[3] Australia, and the United Kingdom.[5] When the chain's Shanghai branch opened in 2017, reports indicated that customers paid others to wait in line for up to three hours on their behalf.[1] In a December 2018 article,The New York Times noted that the drink was "already a hit inSan Francisco".[4]

In theUnited States, cheese tea has gained prominence in cities such asNew York, where Hey Tea opened its first location in December 2023. As of January 2025, the chain operates 15 locations in the city.[5]

References

[edit]
  1. ^abcJonze, Tim (2018-07-26)."My cup of brie: is cheese tea as grim as it sounds?".The Guardian.ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved2025-01-31.
  2. ^"People in Beijing Are Lining Up for Hours to Try 'Cheese Tea'".VICE. 2017-10-17.Archived from the original on 2024-12-23. Retrieved2025-01-31.
  3. ^abcdTseng, Esther (2018-09-21)."Cheese Tea Could Be the New Bubble Tea — If Americans Get Over the Name".Eater.Archived from the original on 2025-01-21. Retrieved2025-01-31.
  4. ^abSeverson, Kim (2018-12-21)."A Peek at Your New Plate: How You'll Be Eating in 2019".The New York Times.ISSN 0362-4331.Archived from the original on 2024-06-16. Retrieved2025-01-31.
  5. ^abcTeclemariam, Tammie (2025-01-30)."Cheese Tea Is Frothy, Salty, and Absolutely Everywhere".Grub Street.Archived from the original on 2025-01-30. Retrieved2025-01-31.
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