
Pen House Boba
Clip: Season 17 Episode 7 | 10m 12sVideo has Closed Captions
Pen House Boba in Willmar serves trendy and tasty milk teas, fruit teas, and slushies.
Pen House Boba in Willmar serves trendy and tasty milk teas, fruit teas, and slushies. Founded in 2023 by siblings Agg Moo Thaw (Pen) and Eh K Soe (EK), Pen House Boba reflects on their journey from a Karen refugee camp in Thailand to building a business in the United States. The siblings fled ongoing conflict in Burma (Myanmar) before relocating to the U.S. in 2011, and adapted a new way of life.
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Postcards is a local public television program presented by Pioneer PBS
Production sponsorship is provided by contributions from the voters of Minnesota through a legislative appropriation from the Arts and Cultural Heritage Fund, Explore Alexandria Tourism, Shalom Hill Farm, West Central...

Pen House Boba
Clip: Season 17 Episode 7 | 10m 12sVideo has Closed Captions
Pen House Boba in Willmar serves trendy and tasty milk teas, fruit teas, and slushies. Founded in 2023 by siblings Agg Moo Thaw (Pen) and Eh K Soe (EK), Pen House Boba reflects on their journey from a Karen refugee camp in Thailand to building a business in the United States. The siblings fled ongoing conflict in Burma (Myanmar) before relocating to the U.S. in 2011, and adapted a new way of life.
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Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorship(upbeat music) (EK chuckles) (drink rattles) - It's my business.
(chuckles) Yeah, it's my business.
I run it.
I don't have to work for other people.
I quit my 9-to-5 job, go to 24/7 job.
(laughs) That's my journey and I like it.
(upbeat music continues) My name is Em Moo Thaw, but when I came to the United State, they messed up my name, so they put Agg.
I don't know what that mean.
And then most likely people call me Pen here with the Pen House Boba.
They call me Pen.
- Hi, my name is EK.
Originally we came from Burma, but due to war and conflicts, we had to immigrate to Thailand, the border of Thailand, which is called Mae La camp.
There's about 13 camps in Thailand around the border.
And some of us can register to come to America for better opportunities and lifestyles.
(gentle piano music) It was coming up on wintertime, didn't know English, didn't know what snow it was.
- It was very scary because we came to the whole new country, the whole new place, everything's different.
I study in school in city like St.
Paul.
I don't know how to get to school.
I don't know how to use locker, like don't know the language here.
Everything is difficult as a beginner here.
- I remember going to school, didn't know really, like, too much English, and got bullied, but we got through it.
- My dad have to came to Willmar to work, and my mom have to go to school.
For us to get the EBT at that time, we have, my mom have to go to school, and then my siblings have to stay with me.
I'm only 11 and take care of three siblings.
Like a lot of people have to do that.
Not just me, but you know, it's not easy.
But I do my best.
(laughs) - I started speaking like a little bit of English, and I'm able to help my parents translate and going to, like, doctors, paperwork, and a little bit of everything.
When I was 17, me and my sister was on our way to St.
Cloud and we wanted some boba.
And on the way back, we like, "We don't have any boba where we live."
We looked more into it.
We did some research about how to make boba and maybe if it could become a business and making a living out of it.
We took a LLC class, which was called Elevate.
We found this place and took us six months to remodel it, everything, to how we want it.
And then we opened on April of 2023.
Started off, it was very popular around that time, especially in the summer, - Starting a business, it's not easy at all.
So we have to start little by little, so we go slow compared to other people.
But it's okay.
Oh, see myself here.
(chuckles) And then we're gonna add like a little tea, like half.
(drink slops) These two.
There you go.
It's all done.
- [EK] So boba tea is originally from Southeast Asia, very popular in Taiwan.
That's where it started.
And then it kind of like just shifted to Thailand, Vietnam, Indonesia, Laos, very popular over there.
- A lot of people don't know about boba in Willmar.
So when we opened the boba shop here, peoples are walking around in downtown, they like, "Oh, what is this?"
They want us to explain about the drink, and then we have them like, "Oh, you should try, you know."
And then they like it, and then they keep coming back, which is nice to happen here.
They were like, "It is very unique," because they don't have anything like this here in Willmar, you know?
- We sell, like, three different kinds of boba.
We also have milk teas, fruit teas, and slushies.
- My favorite order in Pen House Boba is coconut milk tea.
(laughs) Yeah.
I love coconut milk tea.
Not everybody like it, but it's okay.
We have so many flavor.
Our snack is, we don't make profit on it.
If we don't eat it, we go buy to our store.
We're gonna have to buy the same thing, you know?
So we might as well eat our food.
(solemn music) My aunt lives in Burma with my grandma, take care of my grandma.
(chuckles) Every time when there's helicopter coming, they have to run away.
It's not even safe to live in a village anymore.
They have to run, run into the jungle to find a safe place.
We do worry about that 'cause is it, got bomb?
And then we don't know how we gonna find out the information if theyre just gone like that, you know?
I went back to Thailand and Burma two times already.
Oh, and I'm trying to go again because my grandma is really old, and so I'm trying to go again before she is not here anymore.
So things are getting worse in the moment.
So we have to be more careful comparing to when I go back to 2018, 2020.
(people chatter) (child giggles) (people chatter) - Growing up I always liked documenting and cameras in general.
So every time I go places, I want to keep those memories forever just by holding the camera up and showing what real life is like.
This is the school system right here.
(people chatter) This is grade eight, and this is grade seven over there.
And my auntie.
It's beautiful there.
So we enjoy the nature, community, the culture, people, a little bit of everything.
Like playing in the dirt and in the rain, it's probably some of the good memories living in the camp, I'd say.
The people are very nice.
The people are very kind.
They welcome you with open arms, and they'll share every little moments with you and every little thing that they have, and what they can offer.
(people chatter) - Each day, you have to creating the new drinks, you have to come up with a new idea.
- I think they should make a strawberry cheesecake flavor.
- We have strawberry cheesecakes, remember, there.
You should definitely try.
(giggles) Working with my brother sometimes is, you know, sibling is like, (indistinct) Well, it goes smooth, but we are like na-na-na, like arguing a lot.
But then, you know, it's a sibling so we be able to argue.
(laughs) So it's fun.
(laughs) - When you're, like, coming from nothing, you're not doing it for yourself, you're also doing it for your family.
Working hard for your family, making sure like, they don't have to go through the struggle again and over and over, like how they did when you was a kid.
And for my family as well and for my partner.
And so they don't have to struggle like we did, which that's what motivates me to work hard and just keep going.
- Well, see you.
- Yes.
Have a good day.
- Yep.
Bye-bye.
- Bye.
(upbeat music) - [Narrator] "Postcards" is made possible by the Minnesota Arts and Cultural Heritage Fund and the citizens of Minnesota.
Additional support provided by Margaret A. Cargill Philanthropies, Mark and Margaret Yackel-Juleen on behalf of Shalom Hill Farms, a retreat and conference center in a prairie setting near Wyndham, Minnesota.
On the web at shalomhillfarm.org.
A better future starts now.
West Central Initiative empowers communities with resources, funding, and support for a thriving region.
More at wcif.org.
(upbeat music)
Video has Closed Captions
Clip: S17 Ep7 | 13m 7s | In Granite Falls, musician Mike Gill shares his journey as a musician and how music shaped his life. (13m 7s)
Preview: S17 Ep7 | 40s | Pen House Boba serves tasty milk teas, fruit teas, and slushies, and meet saxophonist Mike Gill. (40s)
"The Unknown" performed by Mike Gill
Video has Closed Captions
Clip: S17 Ep7 | 5m 55s | Enjoy this song performed by Mike Gill on the guitar. (5m 55s)
Providing Support for PBS.org
Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorshipSupport for PBS provided by:
Postcards is a local public television program presented by Pioneer PBS
Production sponsorship is provided by contributions from the voters of Minnesota through a legislative appropriation from the Arts and Cultural Heritage Fund, Explore Alexandria Tourism, Shalom Hill Farm, West Central...
























