Tepache

For the municipality in the Mexican state of Sonora, see Tepache, Sonora

The tepache is a drink made out of the flesh and rind of the pineapple, sweetened with brown sugar and cinnamon and sometimes beer. Tepache does not have a high quantity of alcohol, since it is left to ferment for only about three days. The alcohol comes mostly from the addition of a small amount of beer, the most common way of serving it in Mexico. It is a drink normally served cold with chili powder.

Tepache is commonly made by inmates in Mexican prison, because the process of creating tepache is simple and quick. Tepache can also be found in taquerias as an inexpensive drink. Housewives sometimes prepare tepache. In markets, vendors commonly seel it out of an orange barrel.

The word Tepache originates from the Opata tepatzi which later became Tepachi and Tepache. Some historians believe it could mean "place of beautiful women". Tepatzi is also a last name from the State of Tlaxcala in Mexico.[1]

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