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Celebrants in the Parque Intercomunal Padre Hurtado
Throughout Chile , parks are turned into fair-grounds with booths selling all that is typically Chilean: here hats, ponchos and boots of the Chilean cowboy, the mythic huaso (pronounced “waso”).
And there are rodeos with real huasos (or at least real huasos urbanos) and demonstrations of horsemanship by the military and the national police…
…and games for children.
But once the obligatory empanada and chicha are dealt with, the serious eating and drinking can begin. By far the most popular foods for the 18th come from the parrilla, the grill. High on the list are anticuchos[2], mixed meats and sausages skewered with onions and grilled, and served with a marraqueta – a Chilean French-roll.
Plus pigs and lambs, roasted Patagonian style.
And to drink, more chicha, beer, wine, pisco (Chilean brandy), and pipeño (a light sweet wine), plus those Chilean classics, Pepsi and Coke.
And if you still crave something sweet, candy from nearby Mendoza , Argentina .
[1] In South America chicha is a generic term for drinks made of fruit or corn, usually fermented with low levels of alcohol. In Chile chicha is usually made of grapes, or in the south, apples. “Cider” is a close English equivalent.
[2] “Anticucho” is from the Quechua for “cut meat stew” see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anticuchos
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