fbpx
Wikipedia

Mate (drink)

Mate or maté[a] (/ˈmɑːt/ MAH-tay, Spanish: [ˈmate], Portuguese: [ˈmatʃi]) is a traditional South American caffeine-rich infused herbal drink. It is also known as chimarrão[b] or cimarrón,[c] and ka’ay in Guarani.[2] It is made by soaking dried yerba mate (Ilex paraguariensis) leaves in hot water and is traditionally served with a metal straw (bombilla) in a container typically made from a calabash gourd (also called the mate), but also made from a cattle horn (guampa) in some areas. A very similar preparation, known as mate cocido, removes some of the plant material and sometimes comes in tea bags. Today, mate is sold commercially in tea bags and as bottled iced tea.

Mate
Mate in a traditional calabash gourd with a metal bombilla
TypeInfusion, hot
Country of origin The territory of the Guaraní people (present-day Paraguay, the Misiones province of Argentina, southeastern Bolivia, southern Brazil and Uruguay)
IntroducedPre-Columbian era. First European written record by Spanish colonizers in the 15th century

Mate was consumed by the Guaraní and Tupi peoples. Its consumption was exclusive to the natives of Paraguay,[3] more specifically the departments of Amambay and Alto Paraná. It is the national beverage of Argentina,[4] Paraguay and Uruguay and is also consumed in the Bolivian Chaco, Brazil, Northern and Southern Chile, and Syria, where it was brought from Paraguay and Argentina by immigrants.[5][6]

Accessories edit

The metal straw is known as a bombilla or bomba and is traditionally made of silver. Modern straws are typically made of nickel silver, stainless steel, or hollow-stemmed cane. The bombilla functions both as a straw and as a sieve. The submerged end is flared, with small holes or slots that allow the brewed liquid in, but block the chunky matter that makes up much of the mixture. A modern bombilla design uses a straight tube with holes or a spring sleeve to act as a sieve.[7]

The container the mate is served in is also known as mate.[d] It is commonly made from calabash gourd but may also be made out of other materials.

History edit

 
Tertulia and Mate party in Santiago de Chile, in 1821, by Scharf and Schmidtmeyer. John Carter Brown Library.[8][9]
 
Lithograph of José Gaspar Rodríguez de Francia, a 19th-century ruler of Paraguay, with a mate and its bombilla

Mate was first consumed by the indigenous Guaraní who live in what is now Paraguay, southeastern Brazil, Argentina, Bolivia, Uruguay,[1][10][11][12][13] and was also spread by the Tupí people who lived in neighbouring areas. After, it was commercialised to part of southern Brazil and northeast Argentina, mostly some areas that were Paraguayan territory before the Paraguayan War.[citation needed] Therefore, the scientific name of the yerba-mate is Ilex paraguariensis. The consumption of yerba-mate became widespread with the European colonization in the Spanish colony of Paraguay in the late 16th century, among both Spanish settlers and indigenous Guaraní, who consumed it before the Spanish arrival. Yerba Mate consumption spread in the 17th century to the Río de la Plata and from there to Peru and Chile.[14] This widespread consumption turned it into Paraguay's main commodity above other wares such as tobacco, cotton and beef. Aboriginal labour was used to harvest wild stands. In the mid-17th century, Jesuits managed to domesticate the plant and establish plantations in their Indian reductions in the Argentine province of Misiones, sparking severe competition with the Paraguayan harvesters of wild strands. After their expulsion in the 1770s, the Jesuit missions — along with the yerba-mate plantations — fell into ruins. The industry continued to be of prime importance for the Paraguayan economy after independence, but development in benefit of the Paraguayan state halted after the Paraguayan War (1864–1870) that devastated the country both economically and demographically.

Brazil then became the largest producer of mate. In Brazilian and Argentine projects in late 19th and early 20th centuries, the plant was domesticated once again, opening the way for plantation systems. When Brazilian entrepreneurs turned their attention to coffee in the 1930s, Argentina, which had long been the prime consumer, took over as the largest producer, resurrecting the economy of Misiones Province, where the Jesuits had once had most of their plantations. For years, the status of largest producer shifted between Brazil and Argentina.[15]

Today, Argentina is the largest producer with 56–62%, followed by Brazil, 34–36%, and Paraguay, 5%.[16] Uruguay is the largest consumer per capita, consuming around 19 liters per year.[17]

Name edit

The English word comes from the French maté and the American Spanish mate, which means both mate and the vessel for drinking it, from the Quechua word mati for the calabash gourd used to make it.[18][19]

Both the spellings "maté" and "mate" are used in English. The acute accent indicates that the word is pronounced with two syllables, like café (both maté and café are stressed on the first syllable in the UK), rather than like the one-syllable English word "mate".[20] An acute accent is not used in the Spanish spelling, because the first syllable is stressed. The Yerba Mate Association of the Americas points out that, in Spanish, "maté" with the stress on the second syllable means "I killed".[1]

In Brazil, traditionally prepared mate is known as chimarrão, although the word mate and the expression "mate amargo" (bitter mate) are also used in Argentina and Uruguay. The Spanish cimarrón means "rough", "brute", or "barbarian", but is most widely understood to mean "feral", and is used in almost all of Latin America for domesticated animals that have become wild. The word was then used by the people who colonized the region of the Río de la Plata to describe the natives' rough and sour drink, drunk with no other ingredient to sweeten the taste.

Culture edit

 
Pope Francis holds a guampa and bombilla given as a gift while speaking with Argentine President Cristina Fernández de Kirchner.

Mate has a strong cultural significance for both national identity and society. Yerba Mate is the national drink of Paraguay, where it is also consumed with either hot or ice cold water (see tereré);[21] Argentina;[22] and Uruguay. Drinking mate is a common social practice in all of the territory of Paraguay and parts of Argentina, Brazil, Uruguay, southern Chile, and eastern Bolivia. Throughout the Southern Cone, it is considered to be a tradition taken from the Paraguayan Guaraní and drank by the gauchos or vaqueros, terms commonly used to describe the old residents of the South American pampas, chacos, or Patagonian grasslands, found principally in parts of Argentina, Paraguay, Uruguay, southeastern Bolivia, southern Chile and southern Brazil. Argentina has celebrated National Mate Day every 30 November since 2015.[23]

Parque Histórico do Mate, funded by the state of Paraná (Brazil), is a park aimed to educate people on the sustainable harvesting methods needed to maintain the integrity and vitality of the oldest wild forests of mate in the world.[24][25]

Mate is also consumed as an iced tea in various regions of Brazil, originating both from an industrialized form, produced by Matte Leão, and from artisanal producers. It is part of the beach culture in Rio de Janeiro, where it is widely sold by beach vendors;[26] the hot infused variation being uncommon in the area.

Preparation edit

 
A traditional calabash gourd with a kettle
 
A modern mate with an electric kettle

The preparation of mate is a simple process, consisting of filling a container with yerba, pouring hot, but not boiling, water over the leaves, and drinking with a straw, the bombilla, which acts as a filter so as to draw only the liquid and not the yerba leaves. The method of preparing the mate infusion varies considerably from region to region, and which method yields the finest outcome is debated. However, nearly all methods have some common elements. The beverage is traditionally prepared in a gourd vessel, also called mate in Spanish and cuia (= gourd) in Portuguese, from which it is drunk. The gourd is nearly filled with yerba, and hot water,[27] typically at 70 to 85 °C (158 to 185 °F), never boiling,[28] is added. The drink is so popular within countries that consume it, that several national electric kettle manufacturers just refer to the range 70 to 85 °C on its thermostat as "mate" temperature.[citation needed]

The most common preparation involves a careful arrangement of the yerba within the gourd before adding hot water. In this method, the gourd is first filled one-half to three-quarters of the way with yerba. Too much yerba will result in a "short" mate; conversely, too little yerba results in a "long" mate, both being considered undesirable. After that, any additional herbs (yuyo, in Portuguese jujo) may be added for either health or flavor benefits, a practice most common in Paraguay, where people acquire herbs from a local yuyera (herbalist) and use the mate as a base for their herbal infusions. When the gourd is adequately filled, the preparer typically grasps it with the full hand, covering and roughly sealing the opening with the palm. Then the mate is turned upside-down, and shaken vigorously, but briefly and with gradually decreasing force, in this inverted position. This causes the finest, most powdery particles of the yerba to settle toward the preparer's palm and the top of the mate.

Once the yerba mate has settled, the mate is carefully brought to a near-sideways angle, with the opening tilted just slightly upward of the base. The mate is then shaken very gently with a side-to-side motion. This further settles the yerba mate inside the gourd so that the finest particles move toward the opening and the yerba is layered along one side. The largest stems and other bits create a partition between the empty space on one side of the gourd and the lopsided pile of yerba on the other.

 
A typical bomba/bombilla or straw
 
Homemade bamboo bombillas
 
An ornate silver bombilla

After arranging the yerba along one side of the gourd, the mate is carefully tilted back onto its base, minimizing further disturbances of the yerba as it is re-oriented to allow consumption. Some settling is normal, but is not desirable. The angled mound of yerba should remain, with its powdery peak still flat and mostly level with the top of the gourd. A layer of stems along its slope will slide downward and accumulate in the space opposite the yerba (though at least a portion should remain in place).

All of this careful settling of the yerba ensures that each sip contains as little particulate matter as possible, creating a smooth-running mate. The finest particles will then be as distant as possible from the filtering end of the straw. With each draw, the smaller particles would inevitably move toward the straw, but the larger particles and stems filter much of this out. A sloped arrangement provides consistent concentration and flavor with each filling of the mate.

 
Statue of a man serving mate, in Posadas, Misiones, Argentina

Now the mate is ready to receive the straw. Wetting the yerba by gently pouring cool water into the empty space within the gourd until the water nearly reaches the top, and then allowing it to be absorbed into the yerba before adding the straw, allows the preparer to carefully shape and "pack" the yerba's slope with the straw's filtering end, which makes the overall form of the yerba within the gourd more resilient and solid. Dry yerba, though, allows a cleaner and easier insertion of the straw, but care must be taken so as not to overly disturb the arrangement of the yerba. Such a decision is entirely a personal or cultural preference. The straw is inserted with one's thumb and index finger on the upper end of the gourd, at an angle roughly perpendicular to the slope of the yerba, so that its filtering end travels into the deepest part of the yerba and comes to rest near or against the opposite wall of the gourd. It is important for the thumb to form a seal over the end of the straw when it is being inserted, or the air current produced in it will draw in undesirable particulates.

Brewing edit

After the above process, the yerba may be brewed. If the straw is inserted into dry yerba, the mate must first be filled once with cool water as above, then be allowed to absorb it completely (which generally takes no more than two or three minutes). Treating the yerba with cool water before the addition of hot water is essential, as it protects the yerba mate from being scalded and from the chemical breakdown of some of its desirable nutrients. Hot water may then be added by carefully pouring it, as with the cool water before, into the cavity opposite the yerba, until it reaches almost to the top of the gourd when the yerba is fully saturated. Care should be taken to maintain the dryness of the swollen top of the yerba beside the edge of the gourd's opening.

Once the hot water has been added, the mate is ready for drinking, and it may be refilled many times before becoming lavado (washed out) and losing its flavor. When this occurs, the mound of yerba can be pushed from one side of the gourd to the other, allowing water to be added along its opposite side; this revives the mate for additional refillings and is called "reformar o/el mate" (reforming the mate).

Etiquette edit

 
Mate drinking in public is commonplace.
 
A man drinking mate in a car
 
Uruguayan senators drink mate in parliament.

Mate is traditionally drunk in a particular social setting, such as family gatherings or with friends. The same gourd (cuia/mate) and straw (bomba/bombilla) are used by everyone drinking. One person (known in Portuguese as the preparador, cevador, or patrão, and in Spanish as the cebador) assumes the task of server, which most of the time is the house owner in family gatherings. Typically, the cebador fills the gourd and drinks the mate completely to ensure that it is free of particulate matter and of good quality. In some places, passing the first brew of mate to another drinker is considered bad manners, as it may be too cold or too strong; for this reason, the first brew is often called mate del zonzo (fool´s mate). The cebador possibly drinks the second filling as well, if they deem it too cold or bitter. The cebador subsequently refills the gourd and passes it to the drinker to their right, who likewise drinks it all (there is not much; the mate is full of yerba, with room for little water), and returns it without thanking the server; a final gracias or obrigado (thank you) implies that the drinker has had enough.[29] The only exception to this order is if a new guest joins the group; in this case the new arrival receives the next mate, and then the cebador resumes the order of serving, and the new arrival will receive theirs depending on their placement in the group. When no more tea remains, the straw makes a loud sucking noise, which is not considered rude. The ritual proceeds around the circle in this way until the mate becomes lavado (washed out), typically after the gourd has been filled about 10 times or more depending on the yerba used (well-aged yerba mate is typically more potent, so provides a greater number of refills) and the ability of the cebador. When one has had one's fill of mate, they politely thank the cebador, passing the mate back at the same time. It is impolite for anyone but the cebador to move the bombilla or otherwise mess with the mate; the cebador may take offense to this and not offer it to the offender again. When someone takes too long, others in the round (roda in Portuguese, ronda in Spanish) will likely politely warn them by saying "bring the talking gourd" (cuia de conversar); an Argentine equivalent, especially among young people, being no es un micrófono ("it's not a microphone"), an allusion to the drinker holding the mate for too long, as if they were using it as a microphone to deliver a lecture.

Some drinkers like to add sugar or honey, creating mate dulce or mate doce (sweet mate), instead of sugarless mate amargo (bitter mate), a practice said to be more common in Brazil outside its southernmost state. Some people also like to add lemon or orange peel, some herbs or even coffee, but these are mostly rejected by people who like to stick to the "original" mate. Traditionally, natural gourds are used, though wood vessels, bamboo tubes, and gourd-shaped mates, made of ceramic or metal (stainless steel or even silver) are also common, as are vessels made from cattle horns. The gourd is traditionally made out of the porongo or cabaça fruit shell. Gourds are commonly decorated with silver, sporting decorative or heraldic designs with floral motifs. Some gourd mates with elaborated silver ornaments and silver bombillas are true pieces of jewelry and very sought after by collectors.

Contaminants edit

Research found both cold- and hot-water extractions of commercial yerba-mate products contained high levels (8.03 to 53.3 ng/g dry leaves) of carcinogenic polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (i.e. benzo[a]pyrene).[30]

 
Brazilian-style Chimarrão

Other properties edit

Mate is a rich source of caffeine. On average, mate tea contains 92 mg of chlorogenic acid per gram of dry leaves, and no catechins, giving it a significantly different polyphenol profile from other teas.[31][32]

According to Argentine culture in part promoted by marketers, the stimulant in mate is actually a substance called mateína (named after the drink). However, analysis of the active chemicals in mate has found that mateína does not exist.[33]

Legendary origins edit

The Guaraní people started drinking mate in a region that currently includes Paraguay, southern Brazil, southeastern Bolivia, northeastern Argentina and Uruguay. They have a legend that the Goddesses of the Moon and the Cloud came to visit the Earth one day. An old man saved them from a yaguareté (jaguar) that was going to attack them. The goddesses gave him a new kind of plant, from which he could prepare a "drink of friendship" as compensation for his actions.[13]

Variants edit

 
Iced mate cocido

Another drink can be prepared with specially cut dry leaves, very cold water, and, optionally, lemon or another fruit juice, called tereré. It is very common in Paraguay, northeastern Argentina and in the state of Mato Grosso do Sul, Brazil. After pouring the water, it is considered proper to "wait while the saint has a sip" before the first person takes a drink. In southern Brazil, tererê is sometimes used as a derogatory term for a not hot enough chimarrão.

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 Argentina, gas stations sponsored by yerba mate producers provide free hot water to travelers, specifically for the purpose of drinking during the journey. Disposable mate sets with a plastic mate and straw and sets with a thermos flask and stacking containers for the yerba and sugar inside a fitted case are available.

In Argentina, mate cocido (boiled mate), in Brazil, chá mate, is made with a teabag or leaves and drunk from a cup or mug, with or without sugar and milk. Companies such as Cabrales from Mar del Plata and Establecimiento Las Marías produce teabags for export to Europe.[34]

 
Mate is consumed as an ice tea in various regions of Brazil, in both artisanal and industrial forms. This is a bottle of industrialized mate ice tea, bought from a local supermarket in Rio de Janeiro.

Travel narratives, such as Maria Graham's Journal of a Residence in Chile, show a long history of mate drinking in central Chile. Many rural Chileans drink mate, in particular in the southern regions, particularly Magallanes, Aysén and Chiloé.

In Peru, mate is widespread throughout the north and south, first being introduced to Lima in the 17th century. It is widespread in rural zones, and it is prepared with coca (plant) or in a sweetened tea form with small slices of lemon or orange.[35]

In some parts of Syria, Lebanon and other Eastern Mediterranean countries, drinking mate is also common. The custom came from Syrians and Lebanese who moved to South America during the late 19th and early parts of the 20th century, adopted the tradition, and kept it after returning to Western Asia. Syria is the biggest importer of yerba-mate in the world, importing 15,000 tons a year. Mostly, the Druze communities in Syria and Lebanon maintain the culture and practice of mate.[5][6]

According to a major retailer of mate in San Luis Obispo, California, by 2004, mate had grown to about 5% of the overall natural tea market in North America.[36][37] Loose mate is commercially available in much of North America. Bottled mate is increasingly available in the United States. Canadian bottlers have introduced a cane sugar-sweetened, carbonated variety, similar to soda pop. One brand, Sol Mate, produces 10-US-fluid-ounce (300 ml) glass bottles available at Canadian and U.S. retailers, making use of the translingual pun (English 'soul mate'; Spanish/Portuguese 'sun mate') for the sake of marketing.[38]

In some parts of the Southern Cone they prefer to drink bitter mate, especially in Paraguay, Uruguay, the south of Brazil, and parts of Argentina and Bolivia. This is referred to in Brazil and a large part of Argentina as cimarrón – which also an archaic name for wild cattle, especially, to a horse that was very attached to a cowboy—which is understood as unsweetened mate.[39] Many people are of the opinion that mate should be drunk in this form.

Unlike bitter mate, in every preparation of mate dulce, or sweet mate, sugar is incorporated according to the taste of the drinker. This form of preparation is very widespread in various regions of Argentina, like in the Santiago del Estero province, Córdoba (Argentina), Cuyo, and the metropolitan region of Buenos Aires, among others. In Chile, this form of mate preparation is widespread in mostly rural zones. The spoonful of sugar or honey should fall on the edge of the cavity that the straw forms in the yerba, not all over the mate. One variation is to sweeten only the first mate preparation in order to cut the bitterness of the first sip, thus softening the rest. In Paraguay, a variant of mate dulce is prepared by first caramelizing refined sugar in a pot then adding milk. The mixture is heated and placed in a thermos and used in place of water. Often, chamomile (manzanilla, in Spanish) and coconut are added to yerba in the gumpa.

In the sweet version artificial sweeteners are also often added. As an alternative sweetener, natural ka'á he'é (Stevia rebaudiana) is preferred, which is an herb whose leaves are added in order to give a touch of sweetness. This is used principally in Paraguay.

The gourd in which bitter mate is drunk is not used to consume sweet mate due to the idea that the taste of the sugar would be detrimental to its later use to prepare and drink bitter mate, as it is said that it ruins the flavor of the mate.[40]

Materva is a sweet, carbonated soft drink based on yerba mate. Developed in Cuba in 1920, and produced since the 1960s in Miami, Florida, it is a staple of the Cuban culture in Miami.[41][42]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Both mate and maté are common spellings in English. It is spelled mate in both Spanish and Portuguese.[1]
  2. ^ Portuguese: [ʃimɐˈʁɐ̃w]
  3. ^ Spanish: [simaˈron]
  4. ^ Known as mate or a guampa in Spanish, or cuia or cabaça in Brazil.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Petruzzello, Melissa (ed.). "Mate - beverage". Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved 8 October 2015.
  2. ^ Guarani Linguistics in the 21st Century. BRILL. 15 May 2017. ISBN 978-90-04-32257-8.
  3. ^ "En busca del hueso perdido : (tratado de paraguayología) / Helio Vera". Biblioteca Virtual Miguel de Cervantes (in Spanish). Retrieved 25 March 2021.
  4. ^ "Ley 26.871 - Declárase al Mate como infusión nacional". InfoLEG (in Spanish). Argentinean Ministry of Economy. Retrieved 7 October 2010.
  5. ^ a b Barceloux, Donald (3 February 2012). Medical Toxicology of Drug Abuse: Synthesized Chemicals and Psychoactive Plants. John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 978-1-11810-605-1.
  6. ^ a b . Middle East Online. Archived from the original on 12 March 2014. Retrieved 11 March 2014.
  7. ^ Goodfriend, Anne (2 March 2006). "Yerba maté: The accent is on popular health drink". USA Today. p. 1. Retrieved 29 May 2011.
  8. ^ Peter Schmidtmeyer; George Johann Scharf (1821). Travels Into Chile, Over the Andes, in the Years 1820 and 1821: With Some Sketches of the Productions and Agriculture; Mines and Metallurgy; Inhabitants, History, and Other Features, of America; Particularly of Chile, and Arauco. Rowney & Forster. p. 266.
  9. ^ "Tertulia and Mate Party". John Carter Brown Library website. 1821.
  10. ^ Del Techo, Ximénez, Dobrizhoffer, Nicolás, Bartolomé, Martín (1967). Tres encuentros con América, Asunción, p. 40. editorial del Centenario.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  11. ^ Ganson, Barbara (ed.). "The Guaraní and Their Legacy". Oxford Bibliographies. Retrieved 25 March 2021.
  12. ^ "The Guaraní and Their Legacy".
  13. ^ a b Preedy, Victor R. (2013). Tea in Health and Disease Prevention. Academic Press. pp. 165–6. ISBN 9780123849373. The Indians known as the Guarani began drinking yerba mate in the region that now includes Paraguay, southern Brazil, southeastern Bolivia, Northeastern Argentina and Uruguay.
  14. ^ "Regional History of Yerba Mate". www.yerba-mate.com. Retrieved 30 October 2019.
  15. ^ . Establecimiento Las Marías. Archived from the original on 12 November 2011. Retrieved 8 November 2011.
  16. ^ . 9 February 2018. Archived from the original on 10 February 2018. Retrieved 13 July 2018.
  17. ^ . 19 October 2016. Archived from the original on 24 November 2017. Retrieved 23 June 2017.
  18. ^ "maté". Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary.
  19. ^ Etymology of maté in the Trésor de la langue française informatisé
  20. ^ Although the order of spelling variants in dictionaries is not necessarily meaningful in any particular case, Webster's Third New International Dictionary of the English Language Unabridged, the Oxford English Dictionary, Collins English Dictionary, the Random House Dictionary of the English Language and Lexico.com all give the accented form "maté" before the unaccented form "mate", or refer the reader to see "maté" if they look up "mate".
  21. ^ Conran C, Conran T, Hopkinson S (2001). The Conran Cookbook. Conran-Octopus. ISBN 978-1-84091-182-4.
  22. ^ Sanders, Kerry. . MSNBC. p. 1. Archived from the original on 1 October 2012. Retrieved 29 May 2011.
  23. ^ "¡Al gran mate argentino salud! 30 de noviembre: Día Nacional del Mate en la Argentina". INSTITUTO NACIONAL DE LA YERBA MAT. Retrieved 25 January 2021. El Congreso de la Nación Argentina, sancionó en diciembre de 2014 la Ley 27.117, la cual establece que el día 30 de noviembre de cada año se celebre el "Día Nacional del Mate", en homenaje al caudillo Andrés Guacurarí y Artigas, conocido popularmente como "Andresito".
  24. ^ "Museu Paranaense". Museuparanaense.pr.gov.br. Retrieved 13 February 2013.
  25. ^ "Nativa Yerba Mate". nativayerbamate.com/harvest.html. Retrieved 18 July 2011.[permanent dead link]
  26. ^ Barrionuevo, Alexei (9 February 2010). "Clamping Down on the Kaleidoscope of Rio's Beaches". The New York Times. New York City. Retrieved 30 August 2014.
  27. ^ Brooke, Elizabeth (24 April 1991). "Yerba Mate, Ancient Antidote To South America's Heat". The New York Times. Retrieved 28 May 2011.
  28. ^ "Traditional Method". ma-tea.com. Retrieved 30 May 2013.
  29. ^ La Nación newspaper: ¿Se toma un mate? (Segunda parte) 5 August 2018 at the Wayback Machine (in Spanish)
  30. ^ Kamangar, F.; Schantz, M. M.; Abnet, C. C.; Fagundes, R. B.; Dawsey, S. M. (2008). "High Levels of Carcinogenic Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons in Mate Drinks". Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers & Prevention. Cebp.aacrjournals.org. 17 (5): 1262–1268. doi:10.1158/1055-9965.EPI-08-0025. PMID 18483349. Retrieved 24 April 2012.
  31. ^ Heck, C. I.; De Mejia, E. G. (17 October 2007). "Yerba Mate Tea: A Comprehensive Review on Chemistry, Health Implications, and Technological Considerations". Journal of Food Science. 72 (9): R138-51. doi:10.1111/j.1750-3841.2007.00535.x. PMID 18034743. S2CID 32413555.
  32. ^ Heck, C. I.; De Mejia, E. G. (17 October 2007). "Polyphenols in green tea, black tea, and Mate tea". Journal of Food Science. 72 (9): R138–R151. doi:10.1111/j.1750-3841.2007.00535.x. PMID 18034743. S2CID 32413555.
  33. ^ "La mateína no existe". Universidad Nacional del Litoral. 14 October 2011. Retrieved 23 July 2020.
  34. ^ Cabrales abrirá locales en la Capital La Nación online, 6 October 2001 (in Spanish)
  35. ^ Villanueva, Amaro (1960). EL MATE Arte de Cebar. Buenos Aires: La compañia general fabril financiera S. A. pp. 200 (In Spanish).
  36. ^ "Guayaki Honored With 2004 Socially Responsible Business Award" (Press release). Guayaki. 28 October 2004.[permanent dead link]
  37. ^ Everage, Laura (1 November 2004). . The Gourmet Retailer. Archived from the original on 5 November 2006.
  38. ^ Rude, Justin (19 January 2007). "Tip Sheet: Lowdown on Liquid Power-Ups". The Washington Post. Retrieved 29 May 2011.
  39. ^ "Mate Terms and Glossary". Circle of Drink. Retrieved 22 February 2019.
  40. ^ SMITH, JAMES F. (10 August 1988). "More Than a Drink : Yerba Mate: Argentina's Cultural Rite". Los Angeles Times. ISSN 0458-3035. Retrieved 22 February 2019.
  41. ^ Wong, Samantha. (PDF). Johnson and Wales: Student Food Writing. p. 8 (PDF p. 11). Archived from the original (PDF) on 13 January 2014. Retrieved 10 September 2020.
  42. ^ Roque, Raquel Rábade (2011). The Cuban Kitchen (1st ed.). Alfred A. Knopf. p. 6. ISBN 9780375711961. Retrieved 10 September 2020.

Bibliography edit

mate, drink, this, article, about, drink, other, uses, mate, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, mate, d. This article is about the drink For other uses see Mate This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Mate drink news newspapers books scholar JSTOR August 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Mate or mate a ˈ m ɑː t eɪ MAH tay Spanish ˈmate Portuguese ˈmatʃi is a traditional South American caffeine rich infused herbal drink It is also known as chimarrao b or cimarron c and ka ay in Guarani 2 It is made by soaking dried yerba mate Ilex paraguariensis leaves in hot water and is traditionally served with a metal straw bombilla in a container typically made from a calabash gourd also called the mate but also made from a cattle horn guampa in some areas A very similar preparation known as mate cocido removes some of the plant material and sometimes comes in tea bags Today mate is sold commercially in tea bags and as bottled iced tea MateMate in a traditional calabash gourd with a metal bombillaTypeInfusion hotCountry of origin The territory of the Guarani people present day Paraguay the Misiones province of Argentina southeastern Bolivia southern Brazil and Uruguay IntroducedPre Columbian era First European written record by Spanish colonizers in the 15th centuryMate was consumed by the Guarani and Tupi peoples Its consumption was exclusive to the natives of Paraguay 3 more specifically the departments of Amambay and Alto Parana It is the national beverage of Argentina 4 Paraguay and Uruguay and is also consumed in the Bolivian Chaco Brazil Northern and Southern Chile and Syria where it was brought from Paraguay and Argentina by immigrants 5 6 Contents 1 Accessories 2 History 3 Name 4 Culture 5 Preparation 5 1 Brewing 6 Etiquette 7 Contaminants 8 Other properties 9 Legendary origins 10 Variants 11 Notes 12 See also 13 References 14 BibliographyAccessories editThe metal straw is known as a bombilla or bomba and is traditionally made of silver Modern straws are typically made of nickel silver stainless steel or hollow stemmed cane The bombilla functions both as a straw and as a sieve The submerged end is flared with small holes or slots that allow the brewed liquid in but block the chunky matter that makes up much of the mixture A modern bombilla design uses a straight tube with holes or a spring sleeve to act as a sieve 7 The container the mate is served in is also known as mate d It is commonly made from calabash gourd but may also be made out of other materials History editMain article History of yerba mate nbsp Tertulia and Mate party in Santiago de Chile in 1821 by Scharf and Schmidtmeyer John Carter Brown Library 8 9 nbsp Lithograph of Jose Gaspar Rodriguez de Francia a 19th century ruler of Paraguay with a mate and its bombillaMate was first consumed by the indigenous Guarani who live in what is now Paraguay southeastern Brazil Argentina Bolivia Uruguay 1 10 11 12 13 and was also spread by the Tupi people who lived in neighbouring areas After it was commercialised to part of southern Brazil and northeast Argentina mostly some areas that were Paraguayan territory before the Paraguayan War citation needed Therefore the scientific name of the yerba mate is Ilex paraguariensis The consumption of yerba mate became widespread with the European colonization in the Spanish colony of Paraguay in the late 16th century among both Spanish settlers and indigenous Guarani who consumed it before the Spanish arrival Yerba Mate consumption spread in the 17th century to the Rio de la Plata and from there to Peru and Chile 14 This widespread consumption turned it into Paraguay s main commodity above other wares such as tobacco cotton and beef Aboriginal labour was used to harvest wild stands In the mid 17th century Jesuits managed to domesticate the plant and establish plantations in their Indian reductions in the Argentine province of Misiones sparking severe competition with the Paraguayan harvesters of wild strands After their expulsion in the 1770s the Jesuit missions along with the yerba mate plantations fell into ruins The industry continued to be of prime importance for the Paraguayan economy after independence but development in benefit of the Paraguayan state halted after the Paraguayan War 1864 1870 that devastated the country both economically and demographically Brazil then became the largest producer of mate In Brazilian and Argentine projects in late 19th and early 20th centuries the plant was domesticated once again opening the way for plantation systems When Brazilian entrepreneurs turned their attention to coffee in the 1930s Argentina which had long been the prime consumer took over as the largest producer resurrecting the economy of Misiones Province where the Jesuits had once had most of their plantations For years the status of largest producer shifted between Brazil and Argentina 15 Today Argentina is the largest producer with 56 62 followed by Brazil 34 36 and Paraguay 5 16 Uruguay is the largest consumer per capita consuming around 19 liters per year 17 Name editThe English word comes from the French mate and the American Spanish mate which means both mate and the vessel for drinking it from the Quechua word mati for the calabash gourd used to make it 18 19 Both the spellings mate and mate are used in English The acute accent indicates that the word is pronounced with two syllables like cafe both mate and cafe are stressed on the first syllable in the UK rather than like the one syllable English word mate 20 An acute accent is not used in the Spanish spelling because the first syllable is stressed The Yerba Mate Association of the Americas points out that in Spanish mate with the stress on the second syllable means I killed 1 In Brazil traditionally prepared mate is known as chimarrao although the word mate and the expression mate amargo bitter mate are also used in Argentina and Uruguay The Spanish cimarron means rough brute or barbarian but is most widely understood to mean feral and is used in almost all of Latin America for domesticated animals that have become wild The word was then used by the people who colonized the region of the Rio de la Plata to describe the natives rough and sour drink drunk with no other ingredient to sweeten the taste Culture edit nbsp Pope Francis holds a guampa and bombilla given as a gift while speaking with Argentine President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner Mate has a strong cultural significance for both national identity and society Yerba Mate is the national drink of Paraguay where it is also consumed with either hot or ice cold water see terere 21 Argentina 22 and Uruguay Drinking mate is a common social practice in all of the territory of Paraguay and parts of Argentina Brazil Uruguay southern Chile and eastern Bolivia Throughout the Southern Cone it is considered to be a tradition taken from the Paraguayan Guarani and drank by the gauchos or vaqueros terms commonly used to describe the old residents of the South American pampas chacos or Patagonian grasslands found principally in parts of Argentina Paraguay Uruguay southeastern Bolivia southern Chile and southern Brazil Argentina has celebrated National Mate Day every 30 November since 2015 23 Parque Historico do Mate funded by the state of Parana Brazil is a park aimed to educate people on the sustainable harvesting methods needed to maintain the integrity and vitality of the oldest wild forests of mate in the world 24 25 Mate is also consumed as an iced tea in various regions of Brazil originating both from an industrialized form produced by Matte Leao and from artisanal producers It is part of the beach culture in Rio de Janeiro where it is widely sold by beach vendors 26 the hot infused variation being uncommon in the area Preparation editThis section possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed August 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp A traditional calabash gourd with a kettle nbsp A modern mate with an electric kettle The preparation of mate is a simple process consisting of filling a container with yerba pouring hot but not boiling water over the leaves and drinking with a straw the bombilla which acts as a filter so as to draw only the liquid and not the yerba leaves The method of preparing the mate infusion varies considerably from region to region and which method yields the finest outcome is debated However nearly all methods have some common elements The beverage is traditionally prepared in a gourd vessel also called mate in Spanish and cuia gourd in Portuguese from which it is drunk The gourd is nearly filled with yerba and hot water 27 typically at 70 to 85 C 158 to 185 F never boiling 28 is added The drink is so popular within countries that consume it that several national electric kettle manufacturers just refer to the range 70 to 85 C on its thermostat as mate temperature citation needed The most common preparation involves a careful arrangement of the yerba within the gourd before adding hot water In this method the gourd is first filled one half to three quarters of the way with yerba Too much yerba will result in a short mate conversely too little yerba results in a long mate both being considered undesirable After that any additional herbs yuyo in Portuguese jujo may be added for either health or flavor benefits a practice most common in Paraguay where people acquire herbs from a local yuyera herbalist and use the mate as a base for their herbal infusions When the gourd is adequately filled the preparer typically grasps it with the full hand covering and roughly sealing the opening with the palm Then the mate is turned upside down and shaken vigorously but briefly and with gradually decreasing force in this inverted position This causes the finest most powdery particles of the yerba to settle toward the preparer s palm and the top of the mate Once the yerba mate has settled the mate is carefully brought to a near sideways angle with the opening tilted just slightly upward of the base The mate is then shaken very gently with a side to side motion This further settles the yerba mate inside the gourd so that the finest particles move toward the opening and the yerba is layered along one side The largest stems and other bits create a partition between the empty space on one side of the gourd and the lopsided pile of yerba on the other nbsp A typical bomba bombilla or straw nbsp Homemade bamboo bombillas nbsp An ornate silver bombilla After arranging the yerba along one side of the gourd the mate is carefully tilted back onto its base minimizing further disturbances of the yerba as it is re oriented to allow consumption Some settling is normal but is not desirable The angled mound of yerba should remain with its powdery peak still flat and mostly level with the top of the gourd A layer of stems along its slope will slide downward and accumulate in the space opposite the yerba though at least a portion should remain in place All of this careful settling of the yerba ensures that each sip contains as little particulate matter as possible creating a smooth running mate The finest particles will then be as distant as possible from the filtering end of the straw With each draw the smaller particles would inevitably move toward the straw but the larger particles and stems filter much of this out A sloped arrangement provides consistent concentration and flavor with each filling of the mate nbsp Statue of a man serving mate in Posadas Misiones ArgentinaNow the mate is ready to receive the straw Wetting the yerba by gently pouring cool water into the empty space within the gourd until the water nearly reaches the top and then allowing it to be absorbed into the yerba before adding the straw allows the preparer to carefully shape and pack the yerba s slope with the straw s filtering end which makes the overall form of the yerba within the gourd more resilient and solid Dry yerba though allows a cleaner and easier insertion of the straw but care must be taken so as not to overly disturb the arrangement of the yerba Such a decision is entirely a personal or cultural preference The straw is inserted with one s thumb and index finger on the upper end of the gourd at an angle roughly perpendicular to the slope of the yerba so that its filtering end travels into the deepest part of the yerba and comes to rest near or against the opposite wall of the gourd It is important for the thumb to form a seal over the end of the straw when it is being inserted or the air current produced in it will draw in undesirable particulates Brewing edit After the above process the yerba may be brewed If the straw is inserted into dry yerba the mate must first be filled once with cool water as above then be allowed to absorb it completely which generally takes no more than two or three minutes Treating the yerba with cool water before the addition of hot water is essential as it protects the yerba mate from being scalded and from the chemical breakdown of some of its desirable nutrients Hot water may then be added by carefully pouring it as with the cool water before into the cavity opposite the yerba until it reaches almost to the top of the gourd when the yerba is fully saturated Care should be taken to maintain the dryness of the swollen top of the yerba beside the edge of the gourd s opening Once the hot water has been added the mate is ready for drinking and it may be refilled many times before becoming lavado washed out and losing its flavor When this occurs the mound of yerba can be pushed from one side of the gourd to the other allowing water to be added along its opposite side this revives the mate for additional refillings and is called reformar o el mate reforming the mate Etiquette editThis section relies largely or entirely on a single source Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please help improve this article by introducing citations to additional sources Find sources Mate drink news newspapers books scholar JSTOR August 2023 This section s factual accuracy is disputed Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please help to ensure that disputed statements are reliably sourced August 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Mate drinking in public is commonplace nbsp A man drinking mate in a car nbsp Uruguayan senators drink mate in parliament Mate is traditionally drunk in a particular social setting such as family gatherings or with friends The same gourd cuia mate and straw bomba bombilla are used by everyone drinking One person known in Portuguese as the preparador cevador or patrao and in Spanish as the cebador assumes the task of server which most of the time is the house owner in family gatherings Typically the cebador fills the gourd and drinks the mate completely to ensure that it is free of particulate matter and of good quality In some places passing the first brew of mate to another drinker is considered bad manners as it may be too cold or too strong for this reason the first brew is often called mate del zonzo fool s mate The cebador possibly drinks the second filling as well if they deem it too cold or bitter The cebador subsequently refills the gourd and passes it to the drinker to their right who likewise drinks it all there is not much the mate is full of yerba with room for little water and returns it without thanking the server a final gracias or obrigado thank you implies that the drinker has had enough 29 The only exception to this order is if a new guest joins the group in this case the new arrival receives the next mate and then the cebador resumes the order of serving and the new arrival will receive theirs depending on their placement in the group When no more tea remains the straw makes a loud sucking noise which is not considered rude The ritual proceeds around the circle in this way until the mate becomes lavado washed out typically after the gourd has been filled about 10 times or more depending on the yerba used well aged yerba mate is typically more potent so provides a greater number of refills and the ability of the cebador When one has had one s fill of mate they politely thank the cebador passing the mate back at the same time It is impolite for anyone but the cebador to move the bombilla or otherwise mess with the mate the cebador may take offense to this and not offer it to the offender again When someone takes too long others in the round roda in Portuguese ronda in Spanish will likely politely warn them by saying bring the talking gourd cuia de conversar an Argentine equivalent especially among young people being no es un microfono it s not a microphone an allusion to the drinker holding the mate for too long as if they were using it as a microphone to deliver a lecture Some drinkers like to add sugar or honey creating mate dulce or mate doce sweet mate instead of sugarless mate amargo bitter mate a practice said to be more common in Brazil outside its southernmost state Some people also like to add lemon or orange peel some herbs or even coffee but these are mostly rejected by people who like to stick to the original mate Traditionally natural gourds are used though wood vessels bamboo tubes and gourd shaped mates made of ceramic or metal stainless steel or even silver are also common as are vessels made from cattle horns The gourd is traditionally made out of the porongo or cabaca fruit shell Gourds are commonly decorated with silver sporting decorative or heraldic designs with floral motifs Some gourd mates with elaborated silver ornaments and silver bombillas are true pieces of jewelry and very sought after by collectors Contaminants editResearch found both cold and hot water extractions of commercial yerba mate products contained high levels 8 03 to 53 3 ng g dry leaves of carcinogenic polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons i e benzo a pyrene 30 nbsp Brazilian style ChimarraoOther properties editMate is a rich source of caffeine On average mate tea contains 92 mg of chlorogenic acid per gram of dry leaves and no catechins giving it a significantly different polyphenol profile from other teas 31 32 According to Argentine culture in part promoted by marketers the stimulant in mate is actually a substance called mateina named after the drink However analysis of the active chemicals in mate has found that mateina does not exist 33 Legendary origins editSee also Guarani creation myth The Guarani people started drinking mate in a region that currently includes Paraguay southern Brazil southeastern Bolivia northeastern Argentina and Uruguay They have a legend that the Goddesses of the Moon and the Cloud came to visit the Earth one day An old man saved them from a yaguarete jaguar that was going to attack them The goddesses gave him a new kind of plant from which he could prepare a drink of friendship as compensation for his actions 13 Variants edit nbsp Iced mate cocidoAnother drink can be prepared with specially cut dry leaves very cold water and optionally lemon or another fruit juice called terere It is very common in Paraguay northeastern Argentina and in the state of Mato Grosso do Sul Brazil After pouring the water it is considered proper to wait while the saint has a sip before the first person takes a drink In southern Brazil terere is sometimes used as a derogatory term for a not hot enough chimarrao 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 Argentina gas stations sponsored by yerba mate producers provide free hot water to travelers specifically for the purpose of drinking during the journey Disposable mate sets with a plastic mate and straw and sets with a thermos flask and stacking containers for the yerba and sugar inside a fitted case are available In Argentina mate cocido boiled mate in Brazil cha mate is made with a teabag or leaves and drunk from a cup or mug with or without sugar and milk Companies such as Cabrales from Mar del Plata and Establecimiento Las Marias produce teabags for export to Europe 34 nbsp Mate is consumed as an ice tea in various regions of Brazil in both artisanal and industrial forms This is a bottle of industrialized mate ice tea bought from a local supermarket in Rio de Janeiro Travel narratives such as Maria Graham s Journal of a Residence in Chile show a long history of mate drinking in central Chile Many rural Chileans drink mate in particular in the southern regions particularly Magallanes Aysen and Chiloe In Peru mate is widespread throughout the north and south first being introduced to Lima in the 17th century It is widespread in rural zones and it is prepared with coca plant or in a sweetened tea form with small slices of lemon or orange 35 In some parts of Syria Lebanon and other Eastern Mediterranean countries drinking mate is also common The custom came from Syrians and Lebanese who moved to South America during the late 19th and early parts of the 20th century adopted the tradition and kept it after returning to Western Asia Syria is the biggest importer of yerba mate in the world importing 15 000 tons a year Mostly the Druze communities in Syria and Lebanon maintain the culture and practice of mate 5 6 According to a major retailer of mate in San Luis Obispo California by 2004 mate had grown to about 5 of the overall natural tea market in North America 36 37 Loose mate is commercially available in much of North America Bottled mate is increasingly available in the United States Canadian bottlers have introduced a cane sugar sweetened carbonated variety similar to soda pop One brand Sol Mate produces 10 US fluid ounce 300 ml glass bottles available at Canadian and U S retailers making use of the translingual pun English soul mate Spanish Portuguese sun mate for the sake of marketing 38 In some parts of the Southern Cone they prefer to drink bitter mate especially in Paraguay Uruguay the south of Brazil and parts of Argentina and Bolivia This is referred to in Brazil and a large part of Argentina as cimarron which also an archaic name for wild cattle especially to a horse that was very attached to a cowboy which is understood as unsweetened mate 39 Many people are of the opinion that mate should be drunk in this form Unlike bitter mate in every preparation of mate dulce or sweet mate sugar is incorporated according to the taste of the drinker This form of preparation is very widespread in various regions of Argentina like in the Santiago del Estero province Cordoba Argentina Cuyo and the metropolitan region of Buenos Aires among others In Chile this form of mate preparation is widespread in mostly rural zones The spoonful of sugar or honey should fall on the edge of the cavity that the straw forms in the yerba not all over the mate One variation is to sweeten only the first mate preparation in order to cut the bitterness of the first sip thus softening the rest In Paraguay a variant of mate dulce is prepared by first caramelizing refined sugar in a pot then adding milk The mixture is heated and placed in a thermos and used in place of water Often chamomile manzanilla in Spanish and coconut are added to yerba in the gumpa In the sweet version artificial sweeteners are also often added As an alternative sweetener natural ka a he e Stevia rebaudiana is preferred which is an herb whose leaves are added in order to give a touch of sweetness This is used principally in Paraguay The gourd in which bitter mate is drunk is not used to consume sweet mate due to the idea that the taste of the sugar would be detrimental to its later use to prepare and drink bitter mate as it is said that it ruins the flavor of the mate 40 Materva is a sweet carbonated soft drink based on yerba mate Developed in Cuba in 1920 and produced since the 1960s in Miami Florida it is a staple of the Cuban culture in Miami 41 42 Notes edit Both mate and mate are common spellings in English It is spelled mate in both Spanish and Portuguese 1 Portuguese ʃimɐˈʁɐ w Spanish simaˈron Known as mate or a guampa in Spanish or cuia or cabaca in Brazil See also edit nbsp Latin America portal nbsp Drink portalBlack drink Mate con malicia Chilean beverage Ilex guayusa caffeinated beverage made from another holly tree List of Brazilian dishes Mate de coca Club Mate Materva Guayaki YauponReferences edit a b c Petruzzello Melissa ed Mate beverage Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 8 October 2015 Guarani Linguistics in the 21st Century BRILL 15 May 2017 ISBN 978 90 04 32257 8 En busca del hueso perdido tratado de paraguayologia Helio Vera Biblioteca Virtual Miguel de Cervantes in Spanish Retrieved 25 March 2021 Ley 26 871 Declarase al Mate como infusion nacional InfoLEG in Spanish Argentinean Ministry of Economy Retrieved 7 October 2010 a b Barceloux Donald 3 February 2012 Medical Toxicology of Drug Abuse Synthesized Chemicals and Psychoactive Plants John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 978 1 11810 605 1 a b South American mate tea a long time Lebanese hit Middle East Online Archived from the original on 12 March 2014 Retrieved 11 March 2014 Goodfriend Anne 2 March 2006 Yerba mate The accent is on popular health drink USA Today p 1 Retrieved 29 May 2011 Peter Schmidtmeyer George Johann Scharf 1821 Travels Into Chile Over the Andes in the Years 1820 and 1821 With Some Sketches of the Productions and Agriculture Mines and Metallurgy Inhabitants History and Other Features of America Particularly of Chile and Arauco Rowney amp Forster p 266 Tertulia and Mate Party John Carter Brown Library website 1821 Del Techo Ximenez Dobrizhoffer Nicolas Bartolome Martin 1967 Tres encuentros con America Asuncion p 40 editorial del Centenario a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Ganson Barbara ed The Guarani and Their Legacy Oxford Bibliographies Retrieved 25 March 2021 The Guarani and Their Legacy a b Preedy Victor R 2013 Tea in Health and Disease Prevention Academic Press pp 165 6 ISBN 9780123849373 The Indians known as the Guarani began drinking yerba mate in the region that now includes Paraguay southern Brazil southeastern Bolivia Northeastern Argentina and Uruguay Regional History of Yerba Mate www yerba mate com Retrieved 30 October 2019 History of Mate Establecimiento Las Marias Archived from the original on 12 November 2011 Retrieved 8 November 2011 segundoenfoque 9 February 2018 Archived from the original on 10 February 2018 Retrieved 13 July 2018 As Consumption Stagnates in South America will Yerba Mate Move North 19 October 2016 Archived from the original on 24 November 2017 Retrieved 23 June 2017 mate Merriam Webster com Dictionary Etymology of mate in the Tresor de la langue francaise informatise Although the order of spelling variants in dictionaries is not necessarily meaningful in any particular case Webster s Third New International Dictionary of the English Language Unabridged the Oxford English Dictionary Collins English Dictionary the Random House Dictionary of the English Language and Lexico com all give the accented form mate before the unaccented form mate or refer the reader to see mate if they look up mate Conran C Conran T Hopkinson S 2001 The Conran Cookbook Conran Octopus ISBN 978 1 84091 182 4 Sanders Kerry Next time you re in Argentina try a cup of mate MSNBC p 1 Archived from the original on 1 October 2012 Retrieved 29 May 2011 Al gran mate argentino salud 30 de noviembre Dia Nacional del Mate en la Argentina INSTITUTO NACIONAL DE LA YERBA MAT Retrieved 25 January 2021 El Congreso de la Nacion Argentina sanciono en diciembre de 2014 la Ley 27 117 la cual establece que el dia 30 de noviembre de cada ano se celebre el Dia Nacional del Mate en homenaje al caudillo Andres Guacurari y Artigas conocido popularmente como Andresito Museu Paranaense Museuparanaense pr gov br Retrieved 13 February 2013 Nativa Yerba Mate nativayerbamate com harvest html Retrieved 18 July 2011 permanent dead link Barrionuevo Alexei 9 February 2010 Clamping Down on the Kaleidoscope of Rio s Beaches The New York Times New York City Retrieved 30 August 2014 Brooke Elizabeth 24 April 1991 Yerba Mate Ancient Antidote To South America s Heat The New York Times Retrieved 28 May 2011 Traditional Method ma tea com Retrieved 30 May 2013 La Nacion newspaper Se toma un mate Segunda parte Archived 5 August 2018 at the Wayback Machine in Spanish Kamangar F Schantz M M Abnet C C Fagundes R B Dawsey S M 2008 High Levels of Carcinogenic Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons in Mate Drinks Cancer Epidemiology Biomarkers amp Prevention Cebp aacrjournals org 17 5 1262 1268 doi 10 1158 1055 9965 EPI 08 0025 PMID 18483349 Retrieved 24 April 2012 Heck C I De Mejia E G 17 October 2007 Yerba Mate Tea A Comprehensive Review on Chemistry Health Implications and Technological Considerations Journal of Food Science 72 9 R138 51 doi 10 1111 j 1750 3841 2007 00535 x PMID 18034743 S2CID 32413555 Heck C I De Mejia E G 17 October 2007 Polyphenols in green tea black tea and Mate tea Journal of Food Science 72 9 R138 R151 doi 10 1111 j 1750 3841 2007 00535 x PMID 18034743 S2CID 32413555 La mateina no existe Universidad Nacional del Litoral 14 October 2011 Retrieved 23 July 2020 Cabrales abrira locales en la Capital La Nacion online 6 October 2001 in Spanish Villanueva Amaro 1960 EL MATE Arte de Cebar Buenos Aires La compania general fabril financiera S A pp 200 In Spanish Guayaki Honored With 2004 Socially Responsible Business Award Press release Guayaki 28 October 2004 permanent dead link Everage Laura 1 November 2004 Trends in Tea The Gourmet Retailer Archived from the original on 5 November 2006 Rude Justin 19 January 2007 Tip Sheet Lowdown on Liquid Power Ups The Washington Post Retrieved 29 May 2011 Mate Terms and Glossary Circle of Drink Retrieved 22 February 2019 SMITH JAMES F 10 August 1988 More Than a Drink Yerba Mate Argentina s Cultural Rite Los Angeles Times ISSN 0458 3035 Retrieved 22 February 2019 Wong Samantha Materva Un Buchito de Cuba PDF Johnson and Wales Student Food Writing p 8 PDF p 11 Archived from the original PDF on 13 January 2014 Retrieved 10 September 2020 Roque Raquel Rabade 2011 The Cuban Kitchen 1st ed Alfred A Knopf p 6 ISBN 9780375711961 Retrieved 10 September 2020 nbsp Look up mate in Wiktionary the free dictionary nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Mate beverage Bibliography editAssuncao Fernando O 1967 El mate Bolsilibros Arca in Spanish Claude Levi Strauss 1955 Tristes Tropiques 1973 English translation by John and Doreen Weightman New York Atheneum Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mate drink amp oldid 1193394480, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.