Tamarindo (drink)
Mexican non-alcoholic beverage
Summary
Tamarindo, also commonly known as agua de tamarindo, is a non-alcoholic beverage made of tamarind, sugar, and water. The tamarind plant originated in Africa but has since been widely distributed on a global scale and is commonly found in tropical regions. The tamarind plant produces fruit pods containing pulp and seeds. Tamarind is a versatile ingredient that is used for a variety of commercial, culinary and medicinal purposes with the pulp being the most commonly used part of the tamarind plant, used in a range of beverages including tamarindo and other similar beverages such as Nam Ma Kham Wan in Thailand and Poha Beer in Ghana. Tamarind pulp offers a flavour that ranges from sour to sweet, making tamarindo a sour-sweet beverage recognised as a popular flavour of aguas frescas, which is traditionally consumed in Latin America. Comprising only three ingredients, tamarindo involves a simple production process making it an easy beverage to prepare at home. Tamarindo has been produced commercially as a soda flavour, by companies such as Jarritos and Nestle, and distributed globally.
Originally created by Vizcarra
10/24/2005, 6:12:01 AM
Modified
5/25/2026, 8:32:05 AM
Recent revisions
/* History */ enjoyed with > eaten with
added [[Category:Tamarind drinks]] using [[WP:HC|HotCat]]
+[[Category:North American drinks]]; ±[[Category:Cuisine of the Americas]]→[[Category:Caribbean drinks]] using [[WP:HC|HotCat]]: Split per [[WP:Categories for discussion/Log/2026 March 3#Latin America]]
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Rescuing 1 sources and tagging 0 as dead.) #IABot (v2.0.9.5
/* Uses */ unrelated to the drink, moving to [[Tamarind]]
/* Tamarind */ unrelated to the drink
Rescued 1 archive link. [[User:GreenC/WaybackMedic_2.5|Wayback Medic 2.5]] per [[WP:USURPURL]] and [[WP:JUDI#Bot_run_results|JUDI batch #26ac]]
Added more countries
Revert vandalism
/* Production */ [[User:JCW-CleanerBot#Logic|task]], replaced: Research Gate → ResearchGate
Tamarind originated in Africa, not India.
[[Wikipedia:OABOT|Open access bot]]: hdl updated in citation with #oabot.
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