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  2. Maté - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maté

    In Uruguay and Brazil, the traditional gourd is usually big with a corresponding large hole. In Argentina (especially in the capital Buenos Aires), the gourd is small and has a small hole and people sometimes add sugar for flavor. In Uruguay, people commonly walk around the streets toting a mate and a thermos with hot water. In some parts of ...

  3. Yerba-maté - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yerba-maté

    In Argentina, yerba refers exclusively to the yerba mate plant. [16] Yerba mate, therefore, originally translated as literally the 'gourd herb'; i.e., the herb one drinks from a gourd. The Portuguese name for the plant is pronounced variously as [ˈɛɾvɐ ˈmate,-tʃi], in the areas of traditional consumption.

  4. Mate cocido - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mate_Cocido

    Mate cocido [2] (Spanish pronunciation: [ˈmate koˈsiðo], 'boiled maté', or just cocido), chá mate (Brazilian Portuguese: [ˈʃa ˈmatʃi], 'maté tea'), kojoi (Guarani pronunciation:), or yerbiado (Cuyo, Argentina) is an infusion typical of Southern Cone cuisine (mostly consumed in Southern Brazil, the Bolivian Chaco, Argentina, Paraguay and Uruguay).

  5. AP PHOTOS: In northeastern Argentina, yerba mate is ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/ap-photos-northeastern...

    For generations, low-paid laborers known as “tareferos” have toiled in the forests of Misiones, the mate capital of the world. From dawn to sundown, they cut a seemingly endless harvest of the ...

  6. Argentine cuisine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Argentine_cuisine

    A traditional drink of Argentina is an infusion called mate (in Spanish, mate, with the accent on the first syllable [MAH-teh]). The name comes from the hollow gourd from which it is traditionally drunk.

  7. Argentine tea culture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Argentine_tea_culture

    Mate tea served in traditional gourd cups in Argentina. A cup of freshly made mate. The Argentine tea culture is influenced by local and imported varieties and customs. The country is a major producer of tea (Camellia sinensis), but is best known for the cultivation and consumption of mate, made with the leaves of the local yerba mate plant.

  8. List of national drinks - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_national_drinks

    Mate, a traditional beverage in southern South America, especially in Argentina, Paraguay, Uruguay and the south of Brazil Antigua and Barbuda: Rum Argentina: Mate, Wine., [10] Fernet con coca, Hesperidina.

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