MANGOES - A RAW DEAL

May 30 2007  | Views 2114 |  Comments  (27)
I read Vijaya's Blog on mangoes and I had to share this with you.............Gourmets and Pickle lovers, don't miss it...... Expand

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  sunkan posted 7 mnths ago

yeah u made me drool all the way, then viju is suffering so much with pickles is she taking us for a ride then how are u sending her some pl do divert a little to bangalore too yaar..sunkan



  mottogucci posted 1 year ago

Dear Vijaya
thank you. Yes indeed pazhaya chadham and karuk vadu mangaay are a yum.

There is another sloka also.

Kanni maanga Karingaalan,
Kanalil Chutta pappadam
Kaachiya morumundengil, Kaanaam ooninde Vaibhavam.

It is malayalam

It means, if you have kanni maanga (mangooes pickled in salt water), karingaalan (which is a liquidy dish to pour on the rice and mix), pappads roasted on charcoal and a gravy made out of buttermilk, that lunch will be heavenly..



  vijaya posted 1 year ago

I just remembered a couplet in sanskrit which my grandpa used to tell me.It is in maNipravaaLa, a mix of Tamil and sanskrit:
Pazhayadu dadhi miSram
pachcha maanga sameetham/
vaDuk ena vaDu maangaay
bhaagyavanthoo labhanthee//
It means:
Soaked rice kept overnight and mixed with curd,taken with raw man go and vaDumaangaay which is vaDuk (gives a crackling sound when bitten)
-these are got only by the lucky ones!



  mottogucci posted 1 year ago

Thank you sowmya. jigdijig and hillborn for visiting .

Hillborn, as I am the sole pickle eater at home now (my FIL manages to command and get some as he is under salt restriction) I just buy the avakkai and my SIL provides me with vadumanga and when that gets over I restock with Thangam pickles.

Jigdijig
I can visualise. Coz I too have aged  in laws. They do the same thing. It will be 2 PM in the noon and MIL will be dozing and me reading. The blasted vendor would pick the time for his door to door sales and then it would a half hours haggling and whole sale buying.

Sowmya i will surely try out your recipe. I have never made a sweet and hot pickle before. I can visualise the thokku with hot Dosais (yummmm)



  Soumya Srinivasan posted 1 year ago

Yummy blog!
Here's a shredded mango sweet pickle recipe:
Peel and grate raw mangoes. To the grated mangoe, add equal quantity of sugar. Mix thoroughly. Keep it in a flat vessel with a large mouth covered with a thin piece of cloth . Place it in the sun for the whole day. After sun set, bring it in and stir it. Repeat this for about a week. Add jeera powder and cilli powder.

If you find this cumbersome, just cook the mixture on the stove (low flame) till it is done (the syrup will have single thread consistency).



  Jigidijig posted 1 year ago

Hi Mottogucci,
My father who is 84 eats raw (ripen but uncooked) mangoes and gets his stomach upset!!!! But he just loves mangoes. Every season he will sit in the front room and call all the vendors selling mangoes in the street.
Jigidijig



  hillborn posted 1 year ago

You can make avakkai yourself. go for really sour mangoes which are big enough and with the core inside isthick enouh when cut. usually the sellers in Bangalore cut them for us
when we buy.the cut pieces are washed and gried with a cloth and like kadukumangai add salt, chilli powder,and soaked konda kadalai,and methiseeds quarter cup each.mix all together and add for 15 mangoes half litre of pure gingilli oil  powder asafotida and methi
powderand a handful of mustard seeds and add. Daily dont forget to mix once with a clean ladle and close bottle tight use after ten days
we used to get a variety of mango called Kotta mangai [gomangai]
we cut it in such a way it is cut chethukkina pieces. heat gingilli oil quarter cup add mustard seeds and fry the mangoes till the skin changes colour. add chillipowder and asafotida powder and salt. mix well and use.
another variety which was famous only in Ernakulam was Chandrakkaran small mangoes so sweet to eat only sucking them like ushssuryamany said you will know the real taste



  mottogucci posted 1 year ago

Thank you all for your responses.

Blogpulse , Rattandatta

Thank you

Swarajya, I have tasted sweet and sour mango but not from a marwari house also.

Verboseviju
Hey read my blog properly. I have mentioned arachukalakki alias ammanjikkari in the kannimanga section.

Rama Raoji, you are any day welcome to send me a parcel of guntur avakkai ..sluuurp.Can I give my Coimbatore address?? I stay in Tamil Nadu not Taiwan......

Praveenji
Thanks for the topic for my next blog It is going to be jackfruits and Plantains


Denice,
May be one of the recipes might be suitable for the spanish mangoes.

Vaidhyanathanji

Yes kadugu manga thanneer is yum with some main dishes or snacks. Esp Valsans or elayadai (may be the combination is to tuck in more number of elayadais without thekuttafying (sorry for the Tam barmn english).

Melody Queen,

Yes Mahani is still made by people or those who hate the tedious job of cleaning the roots, and mincing them into tiny bits, can definitely buy it in shops. The same thangam pickle people also sell it in packets.  (hey may be I should get a franchise from them and sell in your cities

Vinod the hulk

Sure .. I shall post them . thanks for giving me idea for my next blog...



  swarajya posted 1 year ago

Being from Palakkadu myself ,I could enjoy your article.Yes  Kadugu Manga, Kanni Manga,Maga Keeru,,Thokku etc are special particularly when you take Thayir Chadam or curd rice.Avakkai is an Andhra speciality.But have you tasted the sweet mango pickles of north specially made in marwari houses?Aam Ka Morabba is sweet unlike the spicy one's of south..
Thanks for giving the process of making these items at home.



  verboseviju posted 1 year ago

Hi mottogucci,
What happened to the 'Arachukalakki' with kanni manga or kadugu manga? Yummm! And you know what is the best part of eating curd rice and kadugu manga? After you finish eating and wash your hands, smell your fingertips....DROOL!
Mango memories are a million! In my childhood I used to love the simplest of mango pickles....raw mangoes cut into fine pieces..and mixed with salt, full stop. After a day, this leaves a honey-like liquid... that is the yummiest of all things in this world...eaten with curd rice...
And that chilhood holidays when you throw stones at mangoes, fell them and then break them open on the brick wall, smear salt and chilli powder from a paper 'pottlam' and bite crunch into them............ Ahhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh!





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