Culture Shock! Bolivia - A Survival Guide to Customs and Etiquette

(Grace) #1
140 CultureShock! Bolivia

four generations present. Milk is available for the children.
The table setting may be relatively elaborate, as an image of
family unity. Unity does not mean blandness and polemics
relating to the lives of the family or the external social
situation could trigger lively discussion and even debate.
The tea hour at salons or clubs may involve either family
or friends. When more formalised, a tea time may also be
the setting for a charity event, with money raised through a
rummy game or other mechanism.
Among certain indigenous groups and those who identify
with them, an informal gathering may include the chewing
of coca leaves. Hippie expats and backpackers may choose
this type of gathering rather than a tea hour. However, tea
hour is by no means limited to affl uent classes, with labourers
partaking of the custom as well.
Beverage customs at lunch and dinner hours are less
elaborate. Lunch may be accompanied by a fruit drink,
or soda, with Coca Cola and other soft drink companies
exercising their hegemony. In this country where healthy
natural fruit drinks were a staple, the soft drink industry
has muscled its way into the
consciousness of Bolivians and
Latin Americans in general.
This may not be exclusively
a question of palate, since soft
drinks which are basically water,
sugar and artificial flavouring
are less expensive than fresh
fruit beverages. Europeans accustomed to drinking wine
with lunch will sometimes be disappointed. However, wine
is often made available, and Bolivian wines from the Tarija
region, as well as Argentine and Chilean wines, are of
good quality.
In the battleground of alcoholic beverages for accompanying
meals, beer is the leader by many lengths. Like so many
‘third world’ countries, Bolivia has a thriving beer industry,
and foreigners are rarely disappointed with the local array of
beers. At high altitudes, visitors should be aware that alcohol
and altitude can have a powerful effect. Those who are most

Coca in Coca Cola


Curiously, in a country where
the native coca leaf has been
demonised by Western elites,
Coca Cola, which allegedly
contains coca, has escaped
such criticism.

Free download pdf