Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Yerba-maté is the national drink of Paraguay, where it is also consumed with either hot or ice cold water (see tereré); [20] Argentina; [21] and Uruguay. Drinking maté is a common social practice in all of the territory of Paraguay and Argentina, Brazil, Uruguay, southern Chile, and eastern Bolivia.
Dulce de leche, a popular national spread used to fill cakes and pancakes, eaten over toast, and as an ice-cream flavour Boxed empanadas. Most regions of Argentina are known for their beef-oriented diet. Grilled meat from the asado (barbecue) is a staple, with steak and beef ribs especially common.
A yerba mate plant in the Botanical Garden of Buenos Aires, Argentina. Mate is a tisane, or herbal tea, that is popular in Argentina as well as in Brazil, Paraguay and Uruguay. Mate is the Quechuan word for "gourd". [8] Mate is served in a hollow gourd (or occasionally a horn or a hoof), [9] and drunk through a metal straw called a bombilla.
Argentine alcoholic drinks (3 C, 2 P) Y. Yerba mate (1 C, 11 P, 1 F) Pages in category "Argentine drinks" The following 4 pages are in this category, out of 4 total.
It has also become popular in the Druze and Alawite community in the Levant, especially in Syria and Lebanon, where it is imported from Paraguay and Argentina, thanks to 19th-century Syrian immigrants to Argentina. [9] Yerba mate can now be found worldwide in various energy drinks as well as being sold as a bottled or canned iced tea.
From widely popular drinks to regionally specific delicacies, here are the most popular coffee drinks from most of the countries in the world. ... Argentina, Bolivia, Italy, Costa Rica, Ecuador ...
Fernet con coca (Spanish: [feɾˈne(ð) koŋ ˈkoka], [1] "Fernet and Coke"), also known as fernando, [2] [3] its diminutive fernandito (Spanish: [feɾnanˈdito]), [4] or several other nicknames, [nb 1] is a long drink of Argentine origin consisting of the Italian amaro liqueur fernet and cola, served over ice.
Fernet is commonly mixed with Coca-Cola, a mixed drink known as fernet con coca (Spanish for "fernet and Coke") or fernando. [8] [9] While long available, the drink became much more popular in the mid-1980s, encouraged by advertisements of Fratelli Branca in TV stations with national scope, [10] its popularity growing steadily ever since. [11]