Classroom lesson · Food · 🇦🇷 Argentina

Mate - the shared drink

A leafy tea passed around in a special cup

A traditional mate gourd cup with a metal straw and green leaves inside

Photo · Wikimedia Commons

What is it?

Mate (pronounced 'MAH-tay') is a leafy tea that is drunk every day across Argentina, Uruguay, Paraguay and southern Brazil. It is brewed in a small cup, often made from a dried gourd, and sipped through a metal straw with a little filter at the bottom. The most important thing about mate is that it is shared.

Tell me more

Mate is made from the leaves of a plant called yerba mate. The leaves are packed into the cup, hot water is poured in, and the drinker sips through the straw. Then more hot water is added, and the cup is passed to the next person. One cup goes around the whole circle of friends.

There is a quiet etiquette to mate. The host (called the 'cebador' - the pourer) keeps refilling the cup and passing it around. You drink your whole serving, then hand it back. Saying 'gracias' actually means 'I'm done for now', so don't say it until you're finished!

Argentine families drink mate first thing in the morning, with friends at the park, during long conversations, at work breaks. It is not a drink for one person in a rush - it is a way of slowing down and being together.

The leaves are bitter on their own, so the taste takes some getting used to. Many children drink it with a little sugar, or a slice of orange peel, or a leaf of fresh mint. Each family has its own way.

In the classroom

Walk your class through this in 15 minutes.

Talk together

Discussion prompts

  1. 01Mate is meant to be shared from one cup. Why might that matter as much as the taste?
  2. 02What is a drink or food that you share with your family? What is the 'etiquette' - the rules - of sharing it?
  3. 03Lots of foods and drinks have hidden rules (like 'gracias' meaning you're done). Are there any food rules your family has that visitors might not know?
Try this

Classroom activity

As a class, make a list of 'sharing customs' from your families - foods, drinks, games where one thing goes around. Then design a 'class sharing custom' for a snack. What would the rules be?

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