Sunday, July 22, 2012

FOOD SPECIAL..Monsoon Mangoes


Monsoon Mangoes

Who says you shouldn't eat mangoes once the rains have set in?

    It might seem odd for this column to be musing about mangoes when the monsoons are here, even if they are playing truant at the time of writing. I know people who rigidly refuse to eat mangoes once the monsoons are here. Some even stop eating them after end-May. This again strikes me as really silly for multiple reasons. First, for anyone not living in the past, it is fairly clear that the monsoon now really only sets in towards the end of June. This gives us a whole month of mango eating and one where supply has increased to the point where even quality Alphonsos are vaguely good value.
    And second, what this monsoon-no-mango attitude ignores is that in a country as large as India, with a variety of climate zones, even when the monsoon has set in at one part, there will still be places where its weeks away, not to mention the southern Coromandel Coast, which will only get the returning north-east monsoon from November onwards. So even if the mango season is tailing off on the Malabar and Konkan coasts, it is hitting its peak on the plains of Uttar Pradesh and Bihar, while Tamil Nadu will be enjoying mangoes for many weeks to come. In an ideal situation, we should be able to keep eating great mangoes well into the monsoons.
    But here is where the parochialism of mango lovers is a problem, and I fully concede that Alphonso fanatics are as much, or even more to blame than most. At least in most parts of India you can usually get 6-7 types of mangoes, but in Mumbai it can be hard to find anything other than Alphonsos with only Pairis and Badamis humbly filling out the background. Because it's assumed that Mumbaikars won't pay for other mangoes — or won't pay the sort of prices that greedy Alphonso merchants have got used to — no one is importing the many other excellent mangoes from other parts of India.
    And while Mumbai is the worst for this, other parts of India are also prejudiced — I can never find North Indian mangoes in Chennai. PB Murali, whose incredible organic Banganapallismay be the best mangoes I've eaten this year, tells me that while he tried taking his mangoes to Delhi last year and selling them at Dilli Haat, this year he's not bothering. Nobody really gave them their due there, while in Chennai the demand for his crop from those who know about it is such that he almost has to institute rationing. I was lucky to get about a dozen when I was in Chennai some weeks back, and doled them out to friends in Mumbai, who were all bowled over by how good they were. (Maybe it's a coincidence, but most of the really good mangoes I've had this year were organic, and I think this is testimony to the care with which they were grown and handled, whereas general producers are becoming careless).
    I wish I could get good South Indian mangoes like Banganapallis and Imam Pasands in Mumbai, and also the famous Eastern ones, like Gulabkhas. Perhaps this is something the new gourmet food chains should consider next year, rather than just pandering to Alphonso-extremists. But I'm happy to note that at least some North Indian mangoes make it to the market here, especially after July. Because the monsoon-no-mangos buyers are withdrawing, and since in Mumbai most of them tend to be Alphonso fanatics as well, sellers see some point in other kinds. There are pleasantly sweet Kesars now, the Rajapuris whose quality never quite lives up to their size (which Banganapallis and Imam Pasands do), but are nice enough, but above all there are Langras.
    In places like Bihar, I know, Langrafanatics are like the Alphonso fanatics here, but I'm happy to love both, not least because how different they are. If Alphonsos are languid and perfumed aristocrats, Langras are scrappy, subversive extroverts. Their long green look is the first sign of how they break convention, since they never look ripe, even when they are. You have to take a gamble with Langras, but when you cut in and expose their almost neon-yellow flesh, they are usually sweet, but never in a cloying way. Langras have an acid, exuberant edge which is what makes them amongst the most fun mangoes to eat. At a time like now, when the rains are here, but not here, driving us mad with mugginess and anticipation, the bracing kick of Langras, along with all the other mangoes still in the market, are a good reason to keep buying mangoes long after the monsoon may have set in.
    vikram.doctorCDET120629



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