Warm Weather Rhythm
Wednesday, February 17, 2010 at 9:48AM
We've seen a lot of snow recently. Don't get me wrong, I love the snow - the way it coats all surfaces with a clean, white layer. I love the sound of snow - a sort of white noise as it falls almost silently. My only complaint is that with all this precipitation I don't get any snow days. New York doesn't stop due to inclement weather. The subway always run (except for the times it doesn't, which never is totally random). Needing a little boost in my step, I've been thinking of Latin music. It reminds me of vacation, of warmer weather and a care-free attitude. With that in mind, I compiled my favorite Latin songs, and here they are:
1. Los Aterciopelados – El Album
2. Cabas – Mi Bombon
3. Sonaros de Verdad – A Buena Vista
4. Bebe – Malo
5. Elis Regina e Tom Jobim – Águas de Março
6. Rodrigo y Gabriela - Buster Voodoo
7. Cafe Tacuba - El Padre
8. Luciana Souza - Muita Bobeira
9. Manu Chao - Me Llaman Calle
10. Jeremias - Yo Solo Se Que Solo No Se Nada
11. Orquesta Riviera - Asi Es La Humanidad
12. Shakira y Alejandro Sanz - La Tortura
13. Carlos Vives - La Fuerza Del Amor
14. Maná - Oye Mi Amor
15. Juanes - Lo Que Me Gusta A Mi
16. Elvis Crespo - El Regalito
17. Sergio Mendes & Brasil '66 - Mais Que Nada
18. Babasónicos – Carismatico
19. Julieta Venegas - A Tu Lado
20. Miranda! – Don
21. Caetano Veloso - Cucurrucú Paloma
Now as I prepare to trudge through the snow filled streets and head to work, I'll be a little bit warmer.
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Yerba Mate is a tea, and can be used like any other tea. Its most popular form comes in 500 gram (17.6 oz.) bags of loose-leaf tea that is dried and ground. In some places it is available in tea bags, called Mate Cocido, but these do not provide the strength and full benefit of the more traditional methods for drinking it. Yerba Mate (literally, the "Mate Herb") gets its name from the traditional cup (called Mate as well) used to drink it. This cup, originally a dried and decorated gourd, can be made out of almost anything these days. In South America, where Maté was introduced to the world, Maté is still sipped from the Maté cup using a metal or wood decorative straw & filter called a bombilla. The modern Maté drinker can choose any number of ways to extract the beneficial tea from the herb. It can be brewed like normal loose-leaf tea and filtered before pouring into a cup. It can be use in a coffee press, where the herb is infused with hot water, and then the herb is pressed out of the way of the tea. It can be made into a flavorful iced tea to drink on a hot summer day. It can be made like coffee, in a standard automatic coffee maker (make sure you use a large amount of the herb). And, if you have a Maté cup and a bombilla, you can follow in the foot steps of the ancients by sipping Maté the traditional way. How to prepare a traditional Maté infusion
Some people add sugar and/or some herbs (like mint, for example). Some replace the water with milk, specially for the children. You drink and replenish the Maté with hot water many times till the liquid comes out with almost no taste. The repetitive extraction with hot water seems to be an efficient way of extracting the beneficial properties of the herb. Enjoy! Although the first taste will be an unusual flavor for newcomers, it is a haunting taste that beckons you back time and time again. It's almost as if the body knows how good Maté is for you and calls out for you to take in more. |
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To prepare the Maté infusion, the dried minced leaves of the Yerba Maté are placed inside the Maté cup and hot water (approx. 70 C) is added (this is called "cebar el Maté"). The infusion is sucked through a metal pipe called "bombilla," which has a strainer at its lower end to prevent the minced leaves from reaching the mouth. There are as many different techniques to prepare Maté as Maté drinkers, here is a fairly traditional method:
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