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Chicha is a fermented beverage brewed by the indigenous people of the Andean region. It is traditionally prepared from a specific kind of yellow maize (jora) and is usually referred to as chicha de jora. It has a pale straw color, a slightly milky appearance, and a slightly sour aftertaste. It is drunken either young and sweet or mature and strong. It contains a slight amount of alcohol, 1-3%.
In Peru, chicha also means an informal and transient arrangement, or a street vendor. In other Latin American countries, chicha can simply mean "softdrink".
The common Spanish expression Ni chicha ni limonada is roughly equivalent to the English "neither fish nor fowl."
Chicha de jora is prepared by germinating maize, extracting the malt sugars, boiling the wort, and fermenting it in large vessels, traditionally huge eartheware vats, for several days.
Chicha de jora has been prepared and consumed in communities throughout in the Andes for millennia. In the Incan Empire, chicha was used for ritual purposes and was consumed in vast quantities during religious festivals. In recent years, however, the traditionally prepared chicha is becoming increasingly rare. Only in a small number of towns and villages in southern Peru and Bolivia is it still prepared.
In Peru, mature chicha is used in cooking as a kind of cooking wine, in, for example, seco de cabrito (stewed goat).
There are various regional varieties of chicha: