The Manila Times

HK offers ‘tear gas’ ice cream

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HONG KONG: Tear gas is among the new flavors 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 flavor 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 proBeijing government.

“We would like to make a flavor 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 While the bills were withdrawn, demonstrat­ions continued over concerns Beijing is eroding the civil liberties granted to the former British colony when it was returned to Chinese rule in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.

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