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Cachaça

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Caipirinha, the national drink of  Brazil
Caipirinha, the national drink of Brazil

Cachaça (IPA: [ˌkaˈʃasɐ]) is the most popular distilled alcoholic beverage in Brazil. Cachaça is denomination of origin, in other countries it is known as "aguardente", "pinga" or other names. Cachaça is only produced in Brazil. The average Brazilian drinks about three gallons (roughly twelve litres) of Cachaça annually.[1] Cachaça is, "...the product of the distillation of fermented sugarcane juice, with its alcohol strength between 38% and 48% by volume. Up to six grams per liter of sugar may be added."[2] Cachaça is often said to differ from rum in that it is made from sugarcane juice while rum is made from either molasses or sugarcane juice then aged in oak barrels. 1.3 billion liters of Cachaça are produced each year. Only 1% of this production is exported (mainly to Germany).[3]. Outside Brazil, cachaça is used almost exclusively as an ingredient in tropical drinks, with the caipirinha being the most famous cocktail.

Bottles of cachaça
Bottles of cachaça

Contents

Production

There are two types of cachaça: artesanal and industrial. Artesanal cachaças are produced by thousands of small mills spread all over the country. Traditionally, the fermentation agent is maize flour (called fubá in Portuguese) and the distillation unit is a copper pot still. The resulting product comes out in 3 batches: "head", "core" and "tail". Most of the makers take only the "core", discarding the other two which have undesirable components. Then the beverage is either bottled or stored in wood barrels for aging. The cachaça is aged in barrels made from a great variety of native or exotic trees such as chestnut, umburana, jequitibá, ipê, grápia, balsam wood, almond, jatobá, guanandi, brazilwood, cabreúva, tibiriçá, garapeira, cherry, and oak. Makers of artesanal cachaça usually bottle their own product, selling directly to the market (consumers, bars, restaurants, supermarkets, etc.). Domestically, artesanal cachaças are mostly drunk straight by consumers from the higher economic classes of society, or made into caipirinhas with sugar and lime. Industrial cachaças are made by medium-sized and big mills mostly located in the countryside of the São Paulo and Ceará states. The industrial cachaça makers use column stills to process the fermented sugarcane juice ("continuous distillation process"). Because of this production system, some impurities may remain in the resulting spirit. The product is then sold as a raw material to cachaça bottlers. The bottlers adjust the cachaças to their standards by adding or removing components. Most of the time, industrial cachaças are not aged, being drunk straight by the lower economic classes.

History

Cachaça was invented by the first Portuguese settlers of Brazil, in the region around the town of São Vicente, sometime between 1532 and 1548. Workers at local sugar mills first discovered that the sugarcane juice (garapa), cooked and left standing, would "sour" (ferment) and turn into a mild alcoholic beverage. The product, disparagingly named cagaça, was consumed by slaves, as a cheap substitute for the Indians' cauim. Soon someone had the idea of distilling it, and thus cachaça was born. Cachaça distilleries multiplied through colonial Brazil during the 16th and 17th centuries. Portugal eventually took notice and, in order to protect the market for Portuguese-made grappa (bagaceira), tried several times to outlaw the manufacture and consumption of the new spirit. In 1756, after a century of failure to suppress it, the Crown gave up and levied a tax on cachaça. This tax brought substantial revenue to the Treasury, and contributed to the reconstruction following the 1755 Lisbon earthquake and tsunami. Currently there are more than 4,000 different brands of cachaça available in Brazil. Early in its history it was consumed mainly by Africans, peasants, and members of the lower class. As is often the case, elitists considered it a low drink, unfit for exclusivist bars and tables. However, the finer points of the product gained wider and wider appreciation, and it is now a very popular drink, considered by some to be in the same class as whiskey and wine. In the country's largest cities there are many bars specialized in cachaça, called cachaçarias, offering hundreds of different brands, some of them very expensive. The most prized brands are produced in Minas Gerais. The Brazilian government and producer associations have recently acted to promote the export of cachaça.

Drinking cachaça

Cachaça, like rum, has two varieties: unaged (white) and aged (gold). White cachaça is usually bottled immediately after distillation and tends to be cheaper. It is often used to prepare caipirinha and all other types of beverages in which cachaça is an ingredient. Dark cachaça, usually seen as the "premium" variety, is aged in wood barrels and is meant to be drunk pure. Its flavour is influenced by the type of wood the barrel is made of.

Pure

The traditional way to drink pure cachaça (white or gold) is to sip it in a small 50 ml glass. Cachaça tasters let the drink linger inside their mouths in order to savor the aftertaste. It is best tasted slowly but is sometimes consumed as a shot, like vodka. This alternative way to drink cachaça is in a short and slim glass called martelinho ("little hammer"). Because the glass is narrow the alcohol will not evaporate so fast, thus reducing the smell (considered foul by some).

Cocktails

In Brazil there are many different types of cocktails in which cachaça is the base ingredient, this list is not meant to be exhaustive.

Caipirinha

Main article: Caipirinha

A cold cocktail made of cachaça, limes, and sugar. It is the most famous Brazilian cocktail, the most popular in Brazil. The unique combination of sour (lime) and sweet (sugar) with the strong taste of cachaça makes its character.

Bombeirinho

A very popular drink made of cachaça and red gooseberry syrup (groselha).

Quentão

This is a hot drink that is traditionally prepared in Festas Juninas. Cheap wine is the base ingredient, with cachaça being added to increase the alcoholic level, with ginger and spices added in. It has a strong scent, a sharp taste and a sudden effect. People often claim (inaccurately) that the boiling will make much the alcohol evaporate, this avoiding the social stigmatization associated with drinking cachaça drinks. The name is the augmentative form of the adjective that means "hot", roughly translating into "the very hot (drink)".

Leite de Onça

A cold drink also popular in Festas Juninas, it is made of milk, condensed milk, cinnamon and cachaça. The name means "jaguar milk".

Rabo-de-Galo

Rabo-de-Galo is a mixture of cachaça and red vermouth. The name is a calque of cocktail.

Capeta or Capetão

A strong hot cocktail made of cachaça, cinnamon, some fruit juice (usually cherry, strawberry or grape) vodka, red wine and sugar which is served in large portions, with dry ice added to enhance the fumes. The name means "devil" or "demon".

Other Mixtures

Popular ingredients added to cachaça are cinnamon, lime juice, honey and anise. Honey is especially popular in Minas Gerais.

Batidas

Batidas are cocktails in which some kind of fruit juice or pulp is mixed with cachaça and sugar. Sometimes milk may be added. One special kind of Batida is prepared with egg white instead of fruit. Passion fruit, coconut, lemon and pineapple are the most popular flavours. Batidas are usually denser, sweet beverages that have a fame of causing bad headaches the next day if one drinks too much of them.

Licores

Licores are not cocktails, but the Brazilian version of liqueur. They are beverages in which some spirit is added to fruit juice (sometimes enhanced with sugar) as a catalyst to fermentation or a substitute to it. Traditionally, before importing foreign beverages was possible, licores were prepared by the women of a rich household and kept in beautiful glass bottles in the sitting room, to be served to welcomed guests. Cachaça is used in the preparation of several types of licores (singular: licor) made of fermented fruit juice (or pulp). The most appreciated licores are those made of cocoa, jabuticabas, mint, cherry, figs and peanuts. Jabuticaba licor is especially cherished in Minas Gerais, being a deep purple beverage with a sweet taste and low alcoholic percentage.

List of regional names for cachaça

The name cachaça is now a trademark owned by the Brazilian producers and used for export purposes. However, before the standardisation of cachaça, each Brazilian region had its distinctive name for the same beverage. All around Brazil you can hear people call cachaça with the most different names, such as:

  • Pinga, from the verb pingar ("to drop");
  • Cana (cane, sugar cane) and its diminutive, caninha;
  • Aguardente, "burning (or flaming) water", used to be its formal name and is still used for industrialised cachaças;
  • Mé, mispoken mel ("honey"), because it sweetens life;
  • Marvada ("malvada" with the Minas Gerais state accent, "the evil" or "the meanie", feminine form);
  • Água-que-passarinho-não-bebe ("water that birds won't drink");
  • Cangibrina;
  • Aquela-que-matou-o-guarda ("the one that killed the cop")
  • Manguaça;
  • Mardita ("maldita" with the Minas Gerais' accent, "the damned", feminine form);

It must be noted that Tiquira, although often used as a synonym for cachaça, is actually another drink, made of manioc starch, that was found over the Brazilian North and North-East in colonial times. The Aurélio dictionary lists dozens of popular names for this beverage.

See also

References and notes

  1. ^ Willey, Rob. caipirinha.us/news/files/everyday.jpg "Cane and Able"] (February 2006). Everyday with Rachael Ray. Retrieved January 14, 2007.
  2. ^ Resposta técnica - cachaça (pdf). Retrieved on 2007-02-18.
  3. ^ Marvada chique. Editora Globo (2003-05). Retrieved on 2007-02-18.

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Cachaça from Wíkipedia. ©2006 by Wíkipedia. Licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. View a list of authors or edit this article.

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