Famous Mangoes of India
The Sweet Story of the King of Fruits
From the misty orchards of Ratnagiri to the red-soil farms of Andhra Pradesh — a passionate, hungry, and thoroughly delicious guide to the mangoes that define Indian summers.
Why the Mango Wears the Crown: India’s Eternal Love Affair
If you grew up in India, you don’t need anyone to explain why the mango is the King of Fruits. You already know. You know it in the marrow of your bones, in the memory of sticky fingers in a May afternoon, in the sound of your grandmother calling out from the kitchen — “aamras ready aahe!” — and the way the entire household would abandon whatever it was doing and appear, instantly, at the dining table.
The mango is not just a fruit in India. It is a season, an emotion, a ritual, and an argument. Yes, an argument — because no two Indians can agree on which mango is the best, and this disagreement is not gentle. A Maharashtrian will go to the mat defending the Alphonso. A UP-wala will look at you like you’re slightly unhinged if you suggest anything competes with the Langra. A Gujarati will simply smile and say “Kesar” and consider the debate closed. This is democracy in its purest, most delicious form.
India is the world’s largest producer of mangoes, accounting for nearly 40–45% of global mango output — somewhere around 20 million tonnes annually. With over 1,500 documented varieties, the subcontinent is essentially a living museum of mango biodiversity. And yet, each variety feels deeply personal, tied to a specific soil, a specific river valley, a specific grandparent’s backyard.
Think of the wooden boxes of Alphonsos arriving at Mumbai railway stations in April. Think of the clay pots of ripe mangoes being carried on the heads of vendors through Varanasi’s narrow lanes. Think of the Punjabi wedding where someone inevitably brings a whole crate of Chaunsa and the wedding food is summarily ignored. The mango doesn’t just belong to Indian summers — it is Indian summer.
Botanically speaking, the mango — Mangifera indica — is native to the Indian subcontinent, with its origins traced to the northeastern region, possibly Assam and Bangladesh, some 5,000 years ago. Sanskrit texts from 4,000 BCE mention the mango. The Buddha meditated in mango groves. Mughal emperors obsessed over specific varieties and planted orchards spanning hundreds of acres. The mango has seen empires rise and fall and remained, unruffled, the sweetest constant in Indian life.
The national fruit of India, Pakistan, and the Philippines is all the same — the mango. In India, it was formally designated as the national fruit because of its deep cultural, historical, and nutritional significance. Even the paisley motif — so central to Indian textiles — is believed by many historians to be based on the shape of a mango.
In the pages ahead, we’re going on a grand tour of the famous mangoes of India: their origins, their flavours, their cultural stories, and the passionate regional pride that surrounds each one. Pour yourself some aamras. Let’s go.
Famous Mangoes of India by Region
India’s extraordinary mango diversity is a direct result of its staggering geographic and climatic variety — from the humid coastal plains of Maharashtra and Goa to the semi-arid farms of Andhra Pradesh, from the Gangetic alluvial plains of UP and Bihar to the riverine deltas of Bengal. Each ecosystem coaxes something unique from its mangoes.
1. Alphonso (Hapus) — Ratnagiri & Devgad
If the mango is the King of Fruits, the Alphonso is the emperor. Grown in the volcanic laterite soils of the Ratnagiri and Devgad districts of the Konkan coast, nourished by the salt-laced sea breeze and the Sahyadri mountain rains, the Alphonso — called Hapus in Marathi — is widely regarded as the finest mango in the world. No, we’re not being dramatic. Many international food critics agree.
Taste: Intensely sweet with a complex, wine-like undertone and virtually no fibre. Texture: Buttery, almost custard-like. Aroma: Heady, floral, unmistakable — you can smell a box of Alphonsos from the next room. Sweetness: 10/10. Uses: Aamras, milkshakes, ice cream, desserts, direct eating, pulp export. Fun fact: Named after Afonso de Albuquerque, the Portuguese viceroy who introduced grafting techniques to Goa in the 16th century. A foreign name for India’s most proud homegrown treasure.
2. Kesar — Gir, Gujarat
Grown on the rocky, limestone-rich soil around the Gir Forest region, Kesar gets its name from its spectacular saffron-coloured pulp. It’s also called the “Queen of Mangoes,” which makes it the eternal rival of the Alphonso in mango debates across India. Gujaratis are fiercely loyal — and frankly, they have a point.
Taste: Rich, honey-sweet with earthy notes. Texture: Fleshy and smooth. Aroma: Warm and deeply fruity. Sweetness: 9.5/10. Uses: Aamras, mango shrikhand, milkshakes, export. Trivia: The rock-hard Gir soil, which retains virtually no water, forces mango roots to go deep, resulting in a concentrated, sugar-dense fruit. Stress makes for sweeter mangoes — a lesson life keeps teaching us.
3. Mankurad — Goa
Goa’s beloved Mankurad (also called Malcorado) is the mango that Goans are loyal to with a fervour that rivals Alphonso love in Maharashtra. Slightly later in season, Mankurad is a lusciously sweet, deep orange mango with a small seed and a richly fragrant pulp. Eating it is essentially a meditation on a Goan summer afternoon — unhurried, languid, profoundly satisfying.
Taste: Sweet with a faint citrus edge. Texture: Smooth and juicy. Aroma: Warm and tropical. Sweetness: 9/10. Uses: Direct eating, local desserts, mango vinegar, Goan fish curry accompaniment. Trivia: It is believed to have been brought by Portuguese sailors and has evolved over centuries into an entirely unique Goan cultivar.
4. Badami — Karnataka
Often called the “Alphonso of Karnataka,” the Badami mango is grown extensively in North Karnataka’s districts of Dharwad and Bagalkot. Its flesh is saffron-coloured, fibre-free, and intensely aromatic — a close cousin of the Alphonso in both taste and appearance. The name comes from the Sanskrit word for almond, perhaps because of its almond-shaped seed.
Taste: Rich sweet, faintly tart. Texture: Smooth, fibre-free. Sweetness: 9/10. Uses: Aamras, pulp, ice cream, export. Trivia: Badami is Karnataka’s most exported mango variety and is grown in the same red laterite soils that produce some of India’s finest organic produce.
Taste: Sweetly intoxicating with a rose-tinged aroma (the name literally means “juice full”). Texture: Juicy, smooth. Sweetness: 9/10. Uses: Juice, direct eating, aamras, temples offerings. This mango is traditionally offered at south Indian temples — when a mango achieves religious status, you know it’s doing something right.
5. Banganapalli (Benishan) — Andhra Pradesh
Andhra Pradesh is India’s largest mango-producing state by volume, and its crown jewel is the magnificent Banganapalli — a large, golden-yellow, oval mango of extraordinary sweetness that takes its name from Banganapalle town in Kurnool district. This is a mango for the people: abundant, affordable, generous, and deeply satisfying.
Taste: Mildly sweet with a clean, refreshing finish. Texture: Firm yet creamy, almost no fibre. Aroma: Light and pleasant. Sweetness: 8/10. Uses: Table fruit, mango rice, juice, export. Trivia: Banganapalli was reportedly the first mango to be exported from India by sea, making it India’s original global ambassador.
Taste: Mildly sweet and tangy — not the sweeter dessert mango but beloved for its versatility. Texture: Firm, oblong shape with a distinctive beak-like end (totapuri = parrot-faced). Sweetness: 6/10. Uses: Pickles, mango juice industry, mango slice (dried snack), unripe curries. Trivia: The vast majority of India’s packaged mango juice is made from Totapuri. Every time you drink a Maaza, thank this humble bird-beaked mango.
Taste: Sweet with a pleasant mild tartness. Texture: Smooth. Appearance: Beautiful red-blush skin that makes it visually striking. Sweetness: 8/10. Uses: Table fruit, juice, local markets. Named after the red vermilion (sindoor) for its crimson blush — a mango that wears its heart on its skin.
6. Dasheri — Malihabad, UP
Lucknow’s Malihabad region — the mango orchard capital of northern India — is home to the legendary Dasheri. Named after a village in Lucknow district, this slender, elongated mango is an absolute icon of north Indian summers. A single Dasheri tree in Malihabad, believed to be 300 years old, is considered the mother tree of all Dasheri mangoes. Talk about legacy.
Taste: Sugary sweet with a mild floral complexity. Texture: Soft, minimal fibre. Aroma: Delicate and inviting. Sweetness: 9/10. Uses: Table fruit, milkshakes, direct eating. A Dasheri from Malihabad is as geographically specific and culturally loaded as a Bordeaux wine from Médoc. The terroir matters enormously.
Taste: Balanced sweet-tart, uniquely complex. Texture: Firm and fleshy with some fibre. Aroma: Strong and musky. Sweetness: 8.5/10. Uses: Table fruit, aamras, shakes. The Langra famously stays green even when ripe — giving it a misleading appearance that has caused many heartbroken shoppers to return it to the vendor believing it unripe. Trust the smell, not the colour. Legend says the original Langra tree in Varanasi was owned by a man with a limp (langra), giving the mango its unusual name.
7. Chausa — Bihar & Eastern UP
When every other mango is waving goodbye and summer is turning its back, the Chausa arrives like a glorious encore. This is Bihar’s gift to India — a fat, golden, intensely sweet mango whose arrival in late July and August extends the mango season by precious weeks. Chausa is to mango lovers what a second dessert is to everyone else: completely unnecessary, completely irresistible.
Taste: Intensely sweet with a honey-like depth. Texture: Extremely juicy, soft. Best sucked directly rather than sliced. Aroma: Powerful, intoxicating. Sweetness: 9.5/10. Uses: Direct sucking (yes, that’s a technique), aamras, juice. Trivia: Sher Shah Suri, the 16th-century Afghan king who gave India the Grand Trunk Road, is said to have celebrated victory in the Battle of Chausa by planting these mangoes, giving the variety its name.
8. Himsagar — Murshidabad, West Bengal
Bengal has a famously lyrical relationship with food, and its mangoes are no exception. The Himsagar — named evocatively after the Himalayan sea of snow — is a mid-season mango of extraordinary sweetness that Bengalis regard with near-religious devotion. Ask a Bong foodie and they’ll speak of Himsagar the way a sommelier speaks of a Burgundy Grand Cru.
Taste: Overwhelmingly sweet with a rich butterscotch note. Texture: Fibre-free, smooth, almost liquid. Sweetness: 10/10. Uses: Direct eating, mango mishti, aamras. Bengalis have a saying: eating Himsagar requires no adornment, no knife, no plate — just you, the mango, and enough napkins to survive the experience.
Taste: Mildly sweet, clean flavour. Texture: Firm, great shelf life. Appearance: Can weigh up to 2 kg — an absolute giant. Uses: Table fruit, juice, markets. Named after Fazlibai of Malda, who reportedly cultivated the first tree. A mango with a woman’s name — respect where it’s due.
Taste: Intensely sweet, almost syrupy. Texture: Fibre-free, very soft. Sweetness: 9.5/10. Uses: Temple offerings, direct eating, royal kitchens. Lakshmanbhog means “food fit for Lakshman” — offered to the deity, eaten by mortals lucky enough to find it.
9. Neelam — Tamil Nadu & South India
The Neelam is the mango marathon runner — it’s the last variety to arrive, appearing in June and July when most of its siblings have long departed. Named after the sapphire (neelam), it’s a small, round, extremely fragrant mango with an intense, concentrated sweetness. In Tamil Nadu, it’s eaten the way summer itself should be eaten — slowly, gratefully, knowing it won’t last.
Taste: Intensely sweet with a floral, almost perfume-like complexity. Texture: Soft, some fibre. Aroma: Extraordinary — one of the most fragrant of all Indian mangoes. Sweetness: 9/10. Uses: Table fruit, aamras, juice, religious offerings.
Taste: Mild, sweet with a pleasant tartness. Texture: Firm, large seed, thick flesh. Appearance: Very large, round, greenish-yellow. Uses: Desserts, direct eating, mango festivals. In Tamil Nadu, the Malgova is sliced and served at weddings — its large size makes it a generous, celebratory fruit perfectly suited for the occasion.
Taste: Extremely sweet, honeyed. Texture: Smooth, creamy, fibre-free. Sweetness: 9.5/10. Uses: Premium table fruit, royal kitchen. The name literally means “favourite of the imam” — a mango so divine it was considered fit for religious scholars and nobility. One taste and you’ll understand the reverence.
More Famous Mangoes of India Worth Knowing
A cross between Dasheri and Neelam created by Indian scientists at IARI. Small tree, big fruit, compact design — perfect for modern orchards and home gardens. Deep orange flesh with a balanced sweet-tart flavour. Increasingly popular for home cultivation across India.
One of the earliest mangoes to arrive, Pairi is fibrous but extremely sweet and aromatic. It signals the true beginning of mango season in coastal Maharashtra — when the first Pairi appears in the market, hearts everywhere lift.
Named for the golden line (suvarnarekha) that appears on the skin when ripe. Medium-sized, sweet with a pleasantly spicy note. A local favourite in coastal Odisha, especially Balasore district.
Another IARI hybrid, Mallika combines Neelam’s fragrance with Dasheri’s sweetness. Long shelf life, fibre-free flesh, deep orange colour. Increasingly exported and favoured by commercial growers for its consistency.
India has over 1,500 documented mango varieties, but only about 30–40 are commercially cultivated. Many ancient varieties are in danger of extinction as commercial farming consolidates around popular export cultivars. Several NGOs and government agencies are working to preserve heirloom mango varieties in dedicated orchards — essentially, mango museums that taste extraordinary.
Which Are the Sweetest Mangoes in India? Ranked Comparison
The eternal question. Scientists use Brix scale measurements (degrees Brix = sugar content percentage) to rank mango sweetness objectively — though of course, sweetness perception also involves acidity, texture, and aroma. Here’s the definitive ranking Indians have been arguing about for centuries, now settled (approximately) by science:
| Rank | Mango Variety | Origin | Sweetness (Brix ≈) | Sweetness Bar | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| #1 | Himsagar | West Bengal | 22–24° | 10/10 | Direct eating, aamras |
| #2 | Alphonso (Hapus) | Maharashtra | 21–23° | 9.8/10 | Aamras, desserts, export |
| #3 | Chausa | Bihar / UP | 21–22° | 9.5/10 | Sucking, juice |
| #4 | Kesar | Gujarat | 20–22° | 9.5/10 | Shrikhand, aamras |
| #5 | Imam Pasand | Andhra / Tamil Nadu | 20–21° | 9.5/10 | Table fruit |
| #6 | Dasheri | Uttar Pradesh | 19–21° | 9/10 | Milkshakes, direct eating |
| #7 | Mankurad | Goa | 19–20° | 9/10 | Table fruit, local desserts |
| #8 | Neelam | Tamil Nadu | 18–20° | 9/10 | Juice, table fruit |
| #9 | Langra | Varanasi, UP | 18–19° | 8.5/10 | Direct eating, aamras |
| #10 | Banganapalli | Andhra Pradesh | 17–18° | 8/10 | Table fruit, mango rice |
| #11 | Totapuri | South India | 13–15° | 6/10 | Juice industry, pickles |
The most expensive mango in India is the Miyazaki (Japanese variety) grown in a few orchards in India, which can sell for ₹2.5 lakh per kg with armed guards protecting the trees. Among native Indian varieties, premium Alphonsos from Devgad can fetch ₹800–1,500 per kg at the source. Himsagar from authenticated Murshidabad orchards commands a premium too, and dedicated mango enthusiasts pay whatever is asked without a moment’s hesitation.
Nutritional Value of Mangoes: What You’re Actually Eating
Beyond the joy, the nostalgia, and the sticky fingers, the mango is genuinely one of the most nutritionally dense fruits in existence. A 100-gram serving of ripe mango delivers an impressive nutritional payload:
Mangoes also contain significant amounts of folate (important for cell division), Vitamin K (bone health), Vitamin E (antioxidant), copper (immune function), and a range of polyphenols including mangiferin — a powerful antioxidant found almost exclusively in mangoes. They are rich in beta-carotene, which the body converts to Vitamin A, essential for vision and skin health.
One cup of fresh mango provides about 60% of the daily recommended intake of Vitamin C — more than most common fruits. The mango is also a good source of copper, which supports red blood cell formation. Eating mangoes with milk (as in a milkshake) is not just delicious — the fat in milk significantly improves the absorption of fat-soluble vitamins A and E present in mangoes.
Health Benefits of Eating Mangoes During Summer
Your grandmother told you to eat mangoes. Your doctor will tell you why she was right:
- Energy Boost: The natural sugars in mango — primarily fructose and glucose — provide rapid, bioavailable energy without the crash of processed sweets. The B vitamins (B1, B6) support energy metabolism at the cellular level.
- Digestion & Gut Health: Mangoes contain amylases — digestive enzymes that break down complex starches into simpler sugars. They also contain dietary fibre that feeds beneficial gut bacteria (prebiotics), reducing bloating and improving regularity.
- Skin Glow: The beta-carotene in mangoes converts to Vitamin A, essential for skin cell turnover and collagen synthesis. High Vitamin C content also directly stimulates collagen production. Ayurveda has recommended mango for skin health for millennia — turns out the ancient sages were right.
- Immunity: The combination of Vitamin C, Vitamin A, and mangiferin creates a powerful immunity-supporting package. Mangiferin has demonstrated significant anti-inflammatory and antiviral properties in laboratory studies.
- Hydration: With approximately 83% water content, mangoes are an excellent hydrating food — critical during Indian summers when temperatures can exceed 45°C. They also contain electrolytes (potassium, magnesium) that help maintain fluid balance.
- Eye Health: Both beta-carotene (Vitamin A precursor) and lutein/zeaxanthin in mangoes support retinal health and may reduce the risk of age-related macular degeneration. Mangoes are, quite literally, good for the eyes.
- Heart Health: Mangiferin and other polyphenols in mangoes have demonstrated ability to reduce LDL oxidation, lower triglycerides, and support healthy blood pressure — all key markers of cardiovascular health.
- Natural Sugars vs Processed Sweets: Unlike refined sugar, mango’s natural sugars come packaged with fibre, vitamins, and thousands of phytonutrients that slow absorption and provide nutritional value. Eating a mango is nothing like eating a biscuit. Your body knows the difference.
Raw (unripe) mangoes are used in traditional Indian medicine for a completely different set of benefits: they are high in Vitamin C and pectin, and are used to treat heatstroke (aam panna is literally a traditional summer rehydration drink), scurvy, and digestive disorders. Raw mango with salt and chilli (kairi) is the original summer electrolyte drink of India — thousands of years before sports beverages existed.
Who Should Be Careful with Mangoes?
⚠️ A Word of Balanced Wisdom
Mangoes are genuinely healthy — but moderation matters, and some conditions require specific awareness:
- People with Type 2 Diabetes: Mangoes have a moderate glycaemic index (around 51–60) and a glycaemic load that varies by portion size. People with diabetes should limit intake to one small serving per day, ideally eaten with protein or fat to slow sugar absorption, and always consult a doctor about individual tolerance.
- Weight Management Concerns: Mangoes are calorie-dense compared to low-sugar fruits like berries. Those on calorie-controlled diets should track portion sizes rather than avoid mangoes entirely — the nutritional benefits outweigh moderate caloric intake for most people.
- Mango Allergy: Rare but real. The mango skin contains urushiol, the same compound found in poison ivy, and can cause contact dermatitis in sensitive individuals. Mango pulp allergy also exists. If you experience itching, hives, or swelling after eating mangoes, consult an allergist.
- Excess Body Heat Myth: The traditional belief that mangoes “generate heat” in the body has limited scientific backing. Soaking mangoes in water before eating (a common practice) is said to reduce this effect and has the added benefit of washing off any surface residues.
- Chemically Ripened Mangoes: Commercial mangoes are often ripened using calcium carbide, which releases acetylene gas. This is illegal in India but widely practised. Chemically ripened mangoes cause headaches, nausea, and other health issues. Buy from trusted sources, organic farms, or mangoes ripened on the tree.
Fascinating Mango Trivia: Facts That Will Impress at Any Table
India & the Mango: Facts That Feel Like Fiction
- India produces approximately 40–45% of the world’s total mango output — no other country comes remotely close.
- Emperor Akbar is said to have planted a mango orchard of 100,000 trees near Darbhanga — the famous Lakhi Bagh. Aurangzeb, despite his austere reputation, reportedly also had a deep weakness for mangoes and maintained extensive orchards.
- Mango diplomacy: India has historically sent boxes of premium mangoes as diplomatic gifts — Alphonsos to Japan, Dasheri to the UK, Kesar to the Middle East. The mango is India’s most fragrant ambassador.
- Over 30 Indian mango varieties have received Geographical Indication (GI) Tags protecting their regional identity — similar to how Champagne can only come from the Champagne region of France.
- India hosts dozens of mango festivals each summer, including the famous International Mango Festival in Delhi’s Talkatora Stadium, where hundreds of varieties are displayed, judged, and eaten by thousands of enthusiastic visitors.
- The Mughal emperor Jahangir reportedly said he could identify any mango variety blindfolded, by taste and aroma alone. This is either deeply impressive or a sign that he needed hobbies — possibly both.
- The mango appears in the ancient Indian epic Ramayana — the forest where Rama, Sita, and Lakshmana stayed during exile was described as filled with mango trees. The fruit has literally been part of every chapter of Indian civilisation.
- At the Mango Research Centre in Lucknow, scientists have grafted over 500 varieties onto a single tree — a living testament to India’s extraordinary mango diversity.
- The most expensive Japanese Miyazaki mangoes, when grown experimentally in India, have been auctioned for prices rivalling saffron and truffles. Some enthusiasts have hired guards to protect their Miyazaki trees from theft.
The paisley pattern — ubiquitous in Indian textiles, from Kashmiri shawls to Bollywood costumes — is widely believed to be based on the teardrop shape of a mango. The pattern is called “boteh” or “buta” in Persian, meaning “plant,” but in India it has always been associated with the mango leaf and fruit. Indian fashion and Indian food share the same mango-shaped heart.
Traditional Ways Indians Eat Mangoes
Indians do not merely eat mangoes. They create experiences, rituals, and entire meals around them. Here are the beloved traditional preparations that have been passed down through generations:
Aamras
The crown jewel. Strained mango pulp, eaten with hot puris or bhakri. A maharashtrian meal centred around aamras is a spiritual experience. Add saffron and cardamom for the festival version.
Mango with Chapati
A north Indian summer staple. Roti dunked into ripe mango. Simple. Ridiculous. Unforgettable. No recipe needed — just ripe mangoes and fresh rotis.
Aam ka Achaar
Raw mango pickles — from the fiery Punjabi achaar to the mustard-heavy Bengali aamar chutney to the spice-laden Andhra avakaya. India’s most emotionally loaded condiment.
Mango Rice (Mamidikaya Pulihora)
A south Indian classic: rice tempered with mustard, curry leaves, and grated raw mango. Bright, tangy, and comforting — the perfect summer lunch.
Mango Lassi
Punjab’s gift to the universe. Yoghurt blended with ripe mango and a pinch of cardamom. Possibly the most perfectly designed summer drink in human history.
Aam Panna
Raw green mango boiled, pulped, and blended with cumin, black salt, and mint. India’s original electrolyte drink — drunk to prevent heatstroke since before electrolytes were a concept.
Aamchur & Dried Mango
Dried and powdered raw mango — aamchur — is a pantry staple in Indian kitchens, adding tartness to chole, chaat, and curries all year round. Summer preserved, forever.
Aam Shrikhand & Ice Cream
Hung curd blended with Kesar mango pulp and saffron. Served at every Maharashtrian and Gujarati celebration. Also the reason no one has room for anything else at those celebrations.
The word “chutney” itself comes from the Sanskrit “chatni” meaning to lick — quite likely because the first chutneys were raw mango preparations so irresistible people were licking their fingers long before the word was formalised. India’s earliest culinary records mention mango-based condiments as an essential part of the daily meal, eaten with every grain and bread.
How to Buy, Identify, and Store Mangoes the Right Way
Trust Your Nose
A naturally ripened mango has a strong, sweet, floral fragrance at the stem end. If it smells like a mango, it is a good mango. Chemically ripened fruit has no aroma or a faintly chemical smell.
Gentle Pressure Test
A ripe mango should yield slightly to gentle pressure — like a ripe avocado. Rock hard means unripe. Mushy means overripe. Find that sweet spot.
Soak Before Eating
Soak mangoes in water for 20–30 minutes before eating. This washes away surface residues, reduces the phytic acid content, and is said in traditional medicine to reduce any excess body heat.
Storage Tips
Unripe mangoes: store at room temperature, away from direct sunlight. Ripe mangoes: refrigerate and consume within 2–3 days. Do not refrigerate unripe mangoes — cold halts the ripening process.
Spot Chemical Ripening
Naturally ripened mangoes ripen unevenly and at the stem end first. Chemically ripened mangoes are uniformly yellow or orange with unnatural-looking perfect colour. Natural mangoes have small brown spots or irregular patches — signs of authentic ripening.
Buy Regionally
For Alphonso, buy from Konkan-certified vendors in April–May. For Dasheri, look for Malihabad-source labels. Authentic origin makes a dramatic difference in flavour — mango terroir is real.
Frequently Asked Questions About Mangoes of India
Mango: Not Just a Fruit, But the Feeling of Being Home
If you’ve read this far without running to the kitchen for a mango, you have extraordinary willpower — or it’s December, in which case you have our deepest sympathies.
The mangoes of India are not merely a botanical category or an agricultural commodity. They are a living record of Indian civilisation — grown in soils that have been cultivated for five thousand years, cherished by emperors and monks and grandmothers alike, eaten at every celebration and mourned every monsoon when the season ends. They carry the memory of sticky-fingered childhoods, of railway platforms fragrant with wooden boxes, of outdoor summer lunches where no one spoke because mouths were full of aamras and no words were necessary.
Every mango variety in India is someone’s favourite, someone’s childhood, someone’s argument at the fruit market. From the aristocratic Alphonso to the democratic Banganapalli, from the poetic Himsagar to the historical Chausa — each one is a story told in sweetness.
When the first mango of the season arrives in the market — that singular moment when you lift it to your nose and breathe in the unmistakable scent of summer — something in the Indian soul exhales with relief. Summer is difficult, often brutal. But it always, always brings the mango. And somehow, that is enough.
Go eat a mango. You’ve earned it. 🥭
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