Blogs

A bustling juice stand with colorful signs at a night market. Vibrant atmosphere.
Jun 01, 2026
We're an Adelaide-based wholesale bubble tea supplier built for cafés and shops — with a real storefront you can visit, ingredients freshly imported from Taiwan, and a simple promise most suppliers won't make: we tell you what's actually in the product.
Colorful stack of paper coffee cups with geometric patterns in a cafe setting.
Jun 01, 2026
Australian states keep tightening single-use plastic rules, and bubble tea — heavy on cups, lids and thick straws — is squarely in scope. Here's a practical guide for AU shops on what's changing in 2026, and the paper-based packaging you can switch to.
A wooden menu board in a coffee shop displaying espresso varieties like Americano and Latte.
Jun 01, 2026
Menu kilojoule labelling trips up a lot of food businesses, and bubble tea — sweet, calorie-dense, sold by a mix of independents and franchises — sits right in the question. Here's a plain-English primer on who has to display kilojoules in Australia, what's required, and where to confirm for your state.
Close-up of hand holding bubble tea cup through torn pink paper background.
Jun 01, 2026
Konjac-based jelly toppings are having a moment in 2026 — a springy, lighter-textured alternative to tapioca that suits customers wanting something less heavy. Here's what konjac actually is, how our agar-ball range fits the trend, and how AU shops should position it.
Elegant presentation of three bubble tea flavors in sealed tall cups with red heart lids.
Jun 01, 2026
Strawberry matcha is the breakout pairing, brown sugar is still the social-media king, and floral teas are climbing. Here's a practical look at the flavours worth adding to an AU bubble tea menu in 2026 — and which wholesale ingredients you need to build each.
Five colorful fizzy drinks in plastic cups organized in a row indoors.
Jun 01, 2026
A tropical fruit syrup blend gives you one bottle and one consistent drink; single-fruit syrups give you range and the freedom to mix. Neither is wrong — they suit different menus and different shelves. Here's how AU shops should decide between them, or use both.