In case someone here didn't know; I love mangoes and this caught my eye.
Friday, Jun 4, 2010 21:01 ET
Francis Lam
How to choose and cut mangoes (and turn them into shakes)
A primer on one of our greatest fruits, with recipes for mango lassi and my mom's mango shake
By Francis Lam
snip//
But no matter which mango you go for, look for skins that are taut and smooth. The fruit should feel heavy for its size, a sign of density and juiciness.
To test for ripeness, go with your nose and hands, not your eyes. While most mangoes will change color as they ripen from green to yellow or red, the coloration is really inconsistent. Sometimes an awesomely ripe mango will still be mostly green.
Give the mango a sniff. It should make you want to eat it, smelling like coconuts and flowers and a vacation. A really great one will leave a scent — sweet, dark and leathery — on your hands and maybe have a slight gasoline-y smell. (You won't taste that.)
Then give it a gentle squeeze. If it's ready, it will yield a bit. Remember that mangoes will continue to ripen as they sit, so if you're not planning on eating them for a few days, it might be better to buy ones that are a bit firmer.
Let them sit and ripen at room temperature, and then when they're ready, they can last a few days in the fridge. But, to my mind, it's hard to put them away and stop letting them perfume the room. Better just to eat them.
How to peel and cut a mango
It breaks my heart to see good people do wrong by their mango, struggling with a peeler that can't cut through the thick skin, mashing up the fruit underneath or trying to cut through the thick, flat pit and giving up.
My favorite way to approach a mango with a knife is fast and easy, plus it gives you bite-sized chunks of fruit on a neat little serving dish made from the skin and leaves you with a cook's treat — a fleshy pit to enjoy before your guests eat all your mangoes.
more...
http://www.salon.com/food/eyewitness_cook/index.html?story=/food/francis_lam/2010/06/04/how_to_cut_mango