After being completely spoiled with a cold front last week (80 degrees instead of 100), we're back up to high temps. In our home, we live on tereré. Tereré is the cold version of Mate Tea. Everyone in Paraguay drinks it in the summertime. Tereré was introduced by the Guarani Indians in Paraguay and the tradition has been borrowed by the Southern Cone (Brazilians, Argentineans, Uruguayans and Chileans). Very few Paraguayans drink plain water, so tereré's crucial for hydration in this humid heat. Day wagers take tereré breaks (our version of a coffee break) at 10:00 a.m. and at 3:00 in our area. They gather in a circle and one designated person serves to each person in the "ronda".
Each person takes his turn sipping their serving of the cold tea and immediately returns it to the server. It is considered bad etiquette to hold on to the tereré too long! Paraguayans definitely take tereré seriously!One of our cups is a cow horn, called a guampa. The other one we use is metal, to help keep the drink as cold as possible. The straw is called a bombilla and has a filter at the end of it. It can be made of silver or metal and they are easy to lose, but we wouldn't know that by personal experience!
You will see a Paraguayana carrying his/her thermos everywhere they go. Many times they personalize their thermos with their name or their favorite soccer team. Ours has a scripture verse on it, with our name (so it's not stolen), which, unfortunately, has happened, twice.
Drinking tereré isn't just an
Do you have some type of "break" to sit down and catch up during the busyness of the day?
We're fairly addicted, too. I don't like the highly flavored ones, or when it's really fresh and powdery. But we love it anyway...
ReplyDeleteI am too new to be addicted yet. I am still in the try to like terere phase. Abi, however, is frequently asking "mas terere?" I love the terere breaks and driving through Asuncion and seeing businessmen, teenagers, everyone carrying their thermos and wampa on the street, in their car, in the mall... everywhere.
ReplyDeleteyeah, it's unbelieveble, but in every home, in every street, no matter who you are, no matter what you do, no matter if u have money or if you're poor, tereré it's always there, it's the only thing what paraguayan people doesn't fifhgt for. LOL
ReplyDeleteSentimos muita falta do tereré porque aqui faz muito calor, mas o povo aqui só pensa em trabalhar e se te vêm sentado tomando tereré , pensam que você está perdendo tempo...aqui difícil conseguir uma boa erva de tereré, quando alguém vai para o Paraguay sempre encomendamos para nós...
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