page contents Poor Man's Kitchen Recipes: fresh mangoes
Showing posts with label fresh mangoes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fresh mangoes. Show all posts

Mango - Love it or Hate it

Mango, love it or hate it it's there several times a year to make us happy. You'd be surprised to find out how many recipes include Mango itself. You'd be surprised that the best Mango's come from Pakistan and recently Australia has been picking up a lot in production and quality as well. Fresh mango season lasts from April until August. I consider myself as fortunate by living in the tropics always guarantees to discover great choices of Mangoes at affordable pricing. In the West a Mango could easily hit $5.50 whereas in South East Asia you could possibly catch a good Mango at approximately $2.50 which is a tremendous bargain! Mango isn't really the King of Fruits, that privilege is already taken by the legendary Durian fruit. All in all Mango is a magic fruit loved by young and old. I happen to do my daily walk a dog and took my camera to record the latest mango season. Parrots attacking the fruits due to its sweetness and its likely one of the birds favorite fruit. Unfortunately it doesn't grow freely everywhere around the globe but here in Singapore you can be assured that a Mango trees succeed like boom town charlie!



A fierce competitor.. some of the Mangoes benefits are:
  • Mango fruit is rich in pre-biotic dietary fiber, vitamins, minerals, and poly-phenolic flavonoid antioxidant compounds.
  • According to new research study, mango fruit has been found to protect against colon, breast, leukemia and prostate cancers. Several trial studies suggest that polyphenolic anti-oxidant compounds in mango are known to offer protection against breast and colon cancers.
  • Mango fruit is an excellent source of Vitamin-A and flavonoids like beta-carotene, alpha-carotene, andbeta-cryptoxanthin. 100 g of fresh fruit provides 765 mg or 25% of recommended daily levels of vitamin A. Together; these compounds are known to have antioxidant properties and are essential for vision. Vitamin A is also required for maintaining healthy mucus membranes and skin. Consumption of natural fruits rich in carotenes is known to protect the body from lung and oral cavity cancers.
  • Fresh mango is a good source of potassium. 100 g fruit provides 156 mg of potassium while just 2 mg of sodium. Potassium is an important component of cell and body fluids that helps controlling heart rate and blood pressure.
  • It is also a very good source of vitamin-B6 (pyridoxine), vitamin-C and vitamin-E. Consumption of foods rich in vitamin C helps the body develop resistance against infectious agents and scavenge harmful oxygen-free radicals. Vitamin B-6 or pyridoxine is required for GABA hormone production within the brain. It also controls homocystiene levels within the blood, which may otherwise be harmful to blood vessels resulting in CAD and stroke.
  • Further, it composes moderate amounts of copper. Copper is a co-factor for many vital enzymes, including cytochrome c-oxidase and superoxide dismutase (other minerals function as co-factors for this enzyme are manganese and zinc). Copper is also required for the production of red blood cells.

Perfect eaten on their own, mangoes are also delicious in salads, paired with chicken, in desserts or grilled on the barbecue. Some special Mango recipes:


Lettuce, avocado and mango salad

Ingredients:
1 green oak lettuce, torn into small pieces
1 large avocado, diced
1 large mango, diced
2 tablespoons slivered almonds, toasted
2 tablespoons dried cranberries
1 tablespoon olive oil
                                                          1 tablespoon white wine vinegar

1. Combine lettuce, avocado, mango, almonds and cranberries in a bowl.
2. Whisk oil and vinegar together in a jug. Season with salt and pepper. Pour over lettuce mixture. Toss to combine. Serve.


Low fat mango fool

Ingredients:
150g low-fat ricotta cheese
1/2 cup low-fat vanilla custard
2 large ripe mangoes, peeled, roughly chopped
8 pieces almond bread






1.Place ricotta in a food processor. Process until creamy. Pour in custard and pulse until just combined. Transfer to a large bowl. Wash and dry food processor bowl.
2. Process mango until smooth. Reserve 1/3 cup mango puree. Fold remaining mango puree into ricotta mixture.
3. Half-fill four 1-cup capacity glasses with mango-ricotta mixture. Spoon over reserved puree. Cover and refrigerate for 15 minutes or longer, if time permits. Serve with almond bread.







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