rthorvald wrote:Guys, could you please tell me a little more about what mate *is*?
Besides what buggs_moran very appropriately notes, one has to say that mate is a very important social drink, especially in Argentina, Uruguay and the south of Brazil. It is shared in a round, with one person in charge of preparing it and passing it in turns to the others, who must sip one gourd-ful each and return it immediately (so it doesn't get cold) *without saying thanks*. Whoever says "thank you" is implying he/she has had enough. It is also usual to drop by one's acquaintances, for example at work, in another office, to have a couple of mates with him/her, in the middle of the work day.
Some heretics put sugar in the mate, and even honey, herbs, coffee beans, fruit juice (perhaps this last is a good idea in the north, being warmer, Chris may have seen this in Paraguay).
Southern Brazilians, who are very fond of mate, prepare the leaves of the plant in a very different way, and it tastes *very* different. Buggs, see if you find some Brazilian yerba at your local Chinese market, it is definitively worth a try. It's called "erva" or "cimarr??o".
Guillermo