The undying love of yellow milk

By Yoo Na-hyun Posted : June 29, 2026, 16:51 Updated : June 29, 2026, 17:23
A foreign tourist looks at banana-flavored milk displayed on a shelf at a convenience store in Myeong-dong, central Seoul, on June 29, 2026. AJP Yoo Na-hyun

SEOUL, June 29 (AJP) - Milk may have arrived from the West, but banana milk is unmistakably Korean. 

It is also a favorite of the Huang family. Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang and his daughter Madison are known to hand out bottles of the iconic yellow drink whenever they visit South Korea, introducing friends and colleagues to one of the country's simplest—and perhaps most enduring—culinary souvenirs.
 
NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang hands out banana-flavored milk and Sikhye, a traditional Korean sweet rice drink, to citizens outside the barbecue restaurant "Hyungnim Jeoyo" near Hongdae in Seoul on June 5, 2026, ahead of a dinner meeting with SK Group Chairman Chey Tae-won, LG Group Chairman Koo Kwang-mo and Naver Chairman Lee Hae-jin. The gathering, dubbed the "samso" meeting after samgyeopsal (grilled pork belly) and soju, drew crowds of onlookers. Yonhap.

Half a century after its debut, the squat yellow bottle has become something of a rite of passage for foreign visitors. 

On a hot Monday afternoon in Seoul's Myeong-dong shopping district, tourists streamed in and out of convenience stores with shopping bags in one hand and the distinctive bottle in the other. Some twisted open the cap before leaving the store. Others tucked several bottles into baskets already filled with seaweed snacks, instant ramen and sheet masks.
 
 
Banana-flavored milk is displayed at an Olive Young store in Myeong-dong, central Seoul, on June 29, 2026. AJP Yoo Na-hyun

The drink was almost impossible to miss. Convenience stores stacked banana milk beside their entrances, refrigerators and checkout counters, turning the familiar yellow bottle into one of the neighborhood's unofficial mascots. 

A group of German tourists said tasting banana milk was on their Korea checklist. "We heard Korean banana milk is famous, so we wanted to try it," one traveler said after emerging from the refrigerator aisle. "We even made the banana milk latte we saw on social media."
 
Foreign tourists show off homemade banana milk lattes in Myeong-dong, central Seoul, on June 29, 2026. AJP Yoo Na-hyun

First introduced in 1974, banana-flavored milk has long occupied a special place in Korean daily life. For generations it was inseparable from visits to neighborhood bathhouses, where the chilled drink became the traditional reward after a soak. Today its audience is far broader.
 
A sign promoting banana milk latte is displayed at a convenience store in Myeong-dong, central Seoul, on June 29, 2026. AJP Yoo Na-hyun

Travel videos, TikTok clips and Instagram reels have transformed the once-local favorite into a global curiosity, with countless visitors arriving in Seoul already knowing exactly what the bottle looks like—and where to find it. The numbers suggest they are finding much more than banana milk.

 
Tourists crowd the streets of Myeong-dong in central Seoul on June 29, 2026. AJP Yoo Na-hyun

South Korea welcomed a record 4.74 million foreign visitors during the first quarter of 2026, the highest January-to-March total on record, according to the Korea Tourism Organization. Foreign visitors spent 2.12 trillion won ($1.5 billion) on Korean-issued credit cards in May, surpassing the 2 trillion-won mark for the first time.

In tourist districts such as Myeong-dong, that spending often begins with something surprisingly small.
 
Banana-flavored milk is displayed near the checkout counter at a convenience store in Myeong-dong, central Seoul, on June 29, 2026. AJP Yoo Na-hyun
 
Banana-flavored milk is displayed near the checkout counter at a convenience store in Myeong-dong, central Seoul, on June 29, 2026. AJP Yoo Na-hyun

One yellow bottle.

For many visitors, banana milk has become less of a beverage than a travel ritual—a first taste of Korea, a social media photo, a souvenir and, for some, the beginning of a search for other convenience-store favorites.
 
A tourist looks at banana-flavored milk displayed on a shelf at a grocery store in Myeong-dong, central Seoul, on June 29, 2026. AJP Yoo Na-hyun

Half a century after it first appeared on store shelves, Korea's yellow milk continues to prove that sometimes the country's biggest cultural ambassadors come not from concert stages or television screens, but from the refrigerated aisle of a neighborhood convenience store.

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