The Asian Age

Hong Kong shop offers ‘tear gas’ flavour ice cream

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Hong Kong, May 15: Tear gas is among the new flavour at a Hong Kong ice cream shop. The main ingredient is black peppercorn­s, a reminder of the pungent, peppery rounds fired by police on the streets of the semiautono­mous Chinese city during months of demonstrat­ions last year.

“It tastes like tear gas. It feels difficult to breathe at first, and it’s really pungent and irritating. It makes me want to drink a lot of water immediatel­y,” said customer Anita

Wong, who experience­d tear gas at a protest.

“I think it’s a flashback that reminds me of how painful I felt in the movement, and that I shouldn’t forget.” The flavour is a sign of support for the pro-democracy movement, which is seeking to regain its momentum during the Coronaviru­s pandemic, the shop’s owner said. He spoke on condition of anonymity to avoid repercussi­ons from the pro-Beijing government.

“We would like to make a flavour that reminds people that they still have to persist in the protest movement and don’t lose their passion,” he said.

He tried different ingredient­s, including wasabi and mustard, in an effort to replicate the taste of tear gas. Black pepper, he said, came closest to tear gas with its throat-irritating effects.

“We roast and then grind whole black peppercorn­s and make them into gelato, the Italian style. It’s a bit hot, but we emphasize its aftertaste, which is a sensation of irritation in the throat. It just feels like breathing in tear gas,” the 31-year-old owner said.

More than 16,000 rounds of tear gas were fired during the protests, according to Hong Kong authoritie­s, many in densely populated districts where narrow streets are filled with small restaurant­s and apartment blocks.

The protests began over proposed legislatio­n that would have allowed criminal suspects to be extradited to mainland China to face charges. While the bills were withdrawn, demonstrat­ions continued over concerns Beijing is eroding the civil liberties granted to the former British colony when it was returned to Chinese rule in 1997.

The ice cream shop also provides a space for people to express their views about the movement, including the use of sticky notes that featured in the “Lennon walls” that appeared throughout the territory at the height of the demonstrat­ions. — AP

 ??  ?? A cup of tear gas flavour ice cream in Hong Kong. A Hong Kong ice cream shop has created this flavor using pepper, in memory of all the tear gas fired by the Hong Kong police in recent months. — AP
A cup of tear gas flavour ice cream in Hong Kong. A Hong Kong ice cream shop has created this flavor using pepper, in memory of all the tear gas fired by the Hong Kong police in recent months. — AP

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