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Author Topic:   Yerba Mate
Mannu
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Posts: 710
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Registered: Mar 2006

posted March 05, 2006 04:19 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for Mannu     Edit/Delete Message
Well I was away for a long time and thought I would contribute something to LL

Well I hear that this herb will become more popular than green tea in America and I am sure most of you will hear about this herb very soon.

Well enjoy digging for more info on this herb. The actor in the movie 'Motorcycle Diaries' is seen sipping this drink


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LibraSparkle
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From: Vancouver USA
Registered: May 2004

posted March 05, 2006 04:22 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for LibraSparkle     Edit/Delete Message
Where do you find it?

... I mean... I see that it's from South America... but where do you find it in North America?

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Mannu
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posted March 05, 2006 04:28 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for Mannu     Edit/Delete Message
They say its available in stores like Wegman. Theres one Wegman near me and I will have to go there sometime to check it out. I will get some more information on its availability in other stores meanwhile.

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Mannu
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posted March 05, 2006 04:32 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for Mannu     Edit/Delete Message
Well found this on the internet for the stores in USA:
http://www.usatoday.com/travel/destinations/2006-03-02-yerba-mate_x.htm

quote:

If you've seen the Che Guevera biopic The Motorcycle Diaries, you might wonder what the heck Ernesto and Alberto were drinking.

"Good feeling": The holly-shrub concoction is loaded with anti-oxidants. But unless you add honey, it tastes "bitter and grassy."
Ramzi Haidar, AFP/Getty Images

Sipping through a metal "straw" from a shared gourd, the easy riders kept their energy up with yerba maté (mah-tay), a traditional South American drink — and ritual — that's the hottest U.S. beverage since green tea and chai. (Related story: The health benefits of yerba mate)

Made from the holly shrub of the South American rain forest, maté has gained celebrity status recently, reportedly drunk by Matt Dillon, Madonna, Alicia Silverstone and rocker Flea, among others. Musician Moby sells it at Teany, his New York City cafe. And the International Association of Culinary Professionals recently named it one of the top five food trends for 2006.

Why the sudden popularity? Drinkers laud its anti-oxidant-loaded health benefits. It can't be the taste: Even devotees liken it to stewed hay — "bitter and very grassy," says Oren Arnon, general manager of the Brooklyn Tea Lounge. "Up to a year ago, no one knew what it was," but now "people who are into it sit here and sip for hours."

Drinking maté is a traditional social activity in Mexico, Argentina, Uruguay and Paraguay. Family or friends pass around a gourd of the brew, sipped through a bombilla ("little pump" or "straw"), often made of silver.

In the USA, you don't need to go anywhere to drink it: You can buy the dried, chopped and ground maté leaves in bulk or in tea bags at grocery chains including Whole Foods, Trader Joe's and Wegmans.

But what could really make maté take off, says Perry Abbenante, Whole Foods' national grocery buyer, is a new form: Guayaki's cold, bottled Yerba Maté Organic Energy Drink, which retails for $2.29 and comes in raspberry, mint and traditional flavors.

Guayaki, which dominates the U.S. maté market, produces and distributes organic maté "from source to shelf," says co-founder David Karr. The company began a decade ago when he, his brother and a pal "spent years crossing the country in a van, handing out more than 5 million" free samples.

"We'd set up a table, put out some nice flowers, and talk about this healthy source of caffeine," Karr says.

Now Guayaki is a multimillion-dollar-a-year business; it sells about 100 tons of the stuff each year. "Its health benefits bring people to maté," he says, "but the good feeling" keeps them drinking it.

Jimmy Pumarol, general manager of the "nuevo Latin" restaurant Café Atlántico in Washington, D.C., agrees. Once he tells his clientele about maté's benefits, "they don't care what it tastes like," he says. "It's good for your lungs, your liver, kidneys, stomach." The bartender will even make a yerba maté old fashioned — maté leaves are steeped in hot water before bourbon is added.

Claims about maté's effects range from a "high" or an immune-system booster to an aid for digestion, alertness, healing or weight loss .

Its effect is "more mental clarity than it is a 'buzz,' " Karr explains. After his Argentine friend introduced him to the drink, Karr says, "it cleared up all my allergies — I had hay fever and was allergic to practically everything green."

Tatiana Becker, co-owner of the Trabant Chai Lounge in Seattle, is one of the sample-tasting converts. When she's fixing a drink for herself, she says, "I make what I call a Vanilla Rooibos" (a red South African tea): She brews the maté in vanilla syrup, then adds the tea and lets it all steep. Some customers like to sweeten the straight maté with honey.

"Our bulk order keeps going up," she says. "We have three brewing baskets in our espresso machine, and one is dedicated to maté." The lounge has a monthly tango night, and dancers "are really into maté."

Trabant sells it retail as well — in 16 tea-bag boxes ($6.95) or half-pound bags.

"We also carry a Guayaki kit that has the loose mix, the gourd, the bombilla and an instruction booklet," Becker says.

Now Guayaki hopes to spark a "bevolution" with its new energy drink, Karr says: The "grab-it-and-go" bottles will be available nationwide starting this month.



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beebuddy
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Posts: 1043
From: illinois
Registered: Apr 2005

posted March 06, 2006 08:46 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for beebuddy     Edit/Delete Message
Yerba Mate is great! It is LOADED with potassium and magnesium, two minerals which are severly lacking in the American diet. The problem I see with Mate is the price. I live near a store that specializes in Mate and I can buy top quality "TARAGUI" brand for $4.99 a kilo, which is a lot less than Guyaki and some of the other tea-bag brands.

The trick is to buy online by the kilo or to find a Mexican/South/Central American shop that carries it because you won't be ripped off.

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beebuddy
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From: illinois
Registered: Apr 2005

posted March 06, 2006 08:49 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for beebuddy     Edit/Delete Message
I can't vouch for this online store (it seems fine though) but this is the brand I drink and the price at this website is NICE. You shouldn't pay much more than this and if you go to a store like Whole Foods you will pay 5-10 times that much.
http://store.amigofoods.com/tayemasinpa.html

P.S. Taragui makes a few different styles but I like the one in the blue bag because it is all leaf and no stems.
http://store.amigofoods.com/tayemapr1.html

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beebuddy
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Posts: 1043
From: illinois
Registered: Apr 2005

posted March 06, 2006 09:01 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for beebuddy     Edit/Delete Message
You will also need to get yourself a "bombilla" if you want to drink it in the authentic style.
http://www.taooftea.com/shop.php3?id=&scc=51

It's basically a straw with a strainer at one end. The Argentinians use the hollowed out gourds as a mug.

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LibraSparkle
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Posts: 6023
From: Vancouver USA
Registered: May 2004

posted January 07, 2007 02:28 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for LibraSparkle     Edit/Delete Message
I've been drinking Yerba Mate tea now for some time. It's pretty much replaced coffee for me. I've found they have it at most health food stores... and my favorite store of all, of course, Trader Joes, has the best price.

Thanks so much for bringing this up!

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