Mostrando 6 a 15, de 26 entrada/s en total:
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19 de Junio, 2009
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Mate is more than just good for the body; it's good for the soul. Drinking it can be a form of meditation or reflection - allowing the goodness to infuse into the body while stimulating and resting the mind. But this wholeness does not always happen alone.In traditional Mate use, the cup is often shared among close friends and family - using the same straw, or bombilla. Reminiscent of the kind of closeness written about in Robert Heinlein's "Stranger in a Strange Land," where the characters... Continuar leyendo |
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publicado por
latinart a las 21:25 · Sin comentarios
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19 de Junio, 2009
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General |
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 ... Continuar leyendo |
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publicado por
latinart a las 21:22 · Sin comentarios
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19 de Junio, 2009
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General |
 There is an old Guarani Indian legend that relates the origins of the Guarani in the Forests of Paraguay. According to the legend, the ancestors of the Guarani at one time in the distant past crossed a great and spacious ocean from a far land to settle in the Americas. They found the land both wonderful yet full of dangers; through diligence and effort they subdued the land and inaugurated a new civilization. The Guarani tribes worked the land and became excellent craftsmen. They looked... Continuar leyendo |
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publicado por
latinart a las 21:19 · Sin comentarios
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19 de Junio, 2009
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General |
Mate is as tea-like beverage consumed mainly in Argentina, Uruguay, Paraguay and southern Brazil. It is brewed from the dried leaves and stemlets of the perennial tree Ilex paraguarensis ("Yerba Mate"). The name "Mate" derives from the quichua word "matí" that names the gourd (Lagenaria vulgaris) that is traditionally used to drink the infusion. The scientific name Ilex paraguarensis was given by the French naturalist and botanist Auguste de Saint Hilaire in... Continuar leyendo |
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publicado por
latinart a las 21:12 · Sin comentarios
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19 de Junio, 2009
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General |
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1502, 1488, 1496, 1492, 1489, 1505, 1508, 1512, 1491, 1497, 1514, mate |
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publicado por
latinart a las 05:26 · Sin comentarios
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