Mate cocido | |
Type: | Hot or cold beverage |
Introduced: | 17th century[1] |
Spanish; Castilian: Mate cocido[2] (pronounced as /es/, boiled mate, or just cocido in Corrientes Province), Portuguese: chá mate (pronounced as /pt-BR/, mate tea), Guarani: '''kojoi''' (in Guarani pronounced as /koˈɟoi/), or Spanish; Castilian: yerbiado (Cuyo, Argentina) is an infusion typical of Southern Cone cuisine (mostly consumed in Southern Brazil, the Bolivian Chaco, Argentina, Paraguay and Uruguay). It is traditionally prepared by boiling yerba mate in water, then strained and served in cups. It is a bitter tasting beverage, similar to mate but milder, with the same stimulating and nutritional properties. It is also sold in teabags, so it can be prepared like tea.
The Jesuits in the current territories of the south of Brazil and Paraguay, and the Argentine provinces of Misiones and Corrientes, in the first decades of the 17th century improved the cultivation technique of the yerba mate and exported it. Spain, to compete with the tea that England sold, put a chopped yerba mate on sale to make tea that became popular in Europe, known as the "Tea of the Jesuits".[1]
That "Tea of the Jesuits" from the 17th century, today has become the mate cocido, a very popular infusion that, because of the low price of yerba mate compared to the price of tea or coffee, has become since the early 20th century the common beverage in schools, hospitals and prisons.[1]
The preparation of mate cocido in tea bags is almost the same as regular yerba mate, with the difference that in grinding the dust and sticks are removed, sorting and processing only the leaves.[3] Mate cocido is also produced in soluble form.[4]