There various types of yerba mate used to make the drink, depending on the processing and composition. Some key types include: • – a mix of stems and ground leaf • – despalada: without stems or very little stem content • – Mixed with other herbs and plants, like mint • – in which the leaf has been flavored with flavorings and
food additives • – made specifically for , usually with other herbs like mint etc • – toasted mate • – bagged, similar to tea bags Another drink can be prepared with specially cut dry leaves, very cold water, and, optionally,
lemon or another fruit juice, called . 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, is sometimes used as a derogatory term for a not hot enough . 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 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 mate and sugar inside a fitted case are available. In Argentina, (boiled mate), in Brazil, , is made with a
tea bag 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 tea bags for export to Europe. 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.'''' 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. 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 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. In some parts of the
Southern Cone bitter mate is preferred, 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 –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. Many people are of the opinion that mate should be drunk in this form. Unlike bitter mate, in every preparation of , 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,
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 , not all over the . 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 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 (, in Spanish) and coconut are added to in the gumpa. In the sweet version
artificial sweeteners are also often added. As an alternative sweetener, natural (
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.
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. == See also ==