Tuesday

How to Make Mango Ketchup- Spicy Mango Ketchup Recipe

 

make-mango-ketchup
Fresh Sliced Mangoes

Mango is known as the "the king of fruit." California is home to a big crop of Green Keitt Mango, are the best-tasting variety. These California mangoes are available from late July to mid- October.

Mangoes are in season during the summer season, so take advantage of the ripe fruit then, which will have intense natural sweetness. Mangoes have an intensely sweet and luscious texture that is hard to resist.

Cooking softens the texture and brings out its natural sugars. 

Here are some tips and an excellent recipe for enjoying the world's most popular fruit.


Spicy Mango Ketchup Recipe

spicy-mango-ketchup-recipe

This easy recipe prepares unique tangy mango ketchup. 

Use this mango ketchup the same way you would use tomato ketchup. It is especially good on hamburgers, chickens, hotdogs, sandwiches, fried or steamed sea foods, crab cakes and spread on a BLT.

You can use it fresh for clarity of flavor in salads and relishes.


INGREDIENTS:

1 mango, peeled, flesh chopped (If there are no fresh mango available you can use canned mangoes. I tried this high quality canned mangoes from Dole.)

1/4 cup (45 g) chopped tomato
1 tablespoon (15 ml) rice vinegar
1/4 cup (60 ml) pineapple juice
Salt

1 tablespoon (8 g) chili powder
1 teaspoon (2 g) ground cinnamon
1/2 teaspoon ground nutmeg
2 teaspoons (5 g) ground cumin
2 teaspoons (10 ml) canola oil
2 cloves garlic, minced


COOKING DIRECTIONS:

1) In a large, dry, nonstick skillet, toast the chili powder, cinnamon, nutmeg, and cumin until fragrant and beginning to smoke. 

2) Add the canola oil and stir in the garlic, mango, and tomato. Cook for 5 minutes on low heat. 

3) Add the vinegar and pineapple juice. Let cool slightly and transfer to a blender. 

4) Blend until smooth. 

5) Add salt to taste. 

6) Keep covered in the refrigerator for up to 1 week.


Try One of These Delicious Ketchup Recipes:

How to Make Plum Ketchup? - Spiced Plum Ketchup Recipe

How to Make Homemade Smoked Tomato Ketchup- Healthy Homemade Ketchup


Mango Ketchup Cooking Tips

a) Adding vinegar improves the familiar flavor just enough to elevate this combination to delicious level. 

b) Use light vinegars for this combination—Champagne, rice, or sherry—although a basic white vinegar works as well. I usually get mine from Amazon.com. Try my favorite band, https://amzn.to/2XgNFOj

Avoid red wine or balsamic vinegars here (they’re great for other combinations), as their strong tastes and dark colors will overwhelm the flavor combination.

c) For less than perfectly ripe mango, consider waiting a few days before using it or roasting it with orange juice to bring out the sugars.

d) Cinnamon gives the mango a contrasting flavor factor compatible with both you savory and sweet foods

e) This mango ketchup recipe uses ground cinnamon as seasoning and toasts it to improve its flavor. 

Grind your own cinnamon by chopping the sticks roughly with a knife and then grinding in to a spice grinder or cleaned-out coffee-bean grinder. This will give fresh cinnamon flavor.


Mango Health Benefits

Eating mangoes regularly can help your skin, hair, eyes, heart and immune system.

Mangoes are low in calories and sodium.

Mangoes are also full of vitamins and antioxidants, especially vision-protective vitamin A: one mango provides 45% of your daily value.

The antioxidants lutein and zeaxanthin found in mangos help your eyes in several ways.

Other phytochemicals are present in mango peel and pulp, such as the triterpene and lupeol.


Other Mango Nutrition Benefits

1 cup of fresh mango slices provides:

1 gram of protein

3 grams soluble fiber

12 % daily value for vitamin E

17 % daily value for vitamin B6

Mango is super rich in beta-carotene

3 mg sodium

28 grams carbohydrate

0.5 grams fat (0.2 monounsaturated fat, 0.1 g polyunsaturated fat)

Mango also supplies about 75% of the daily minimum vitamin C intake. This nutrient is needed to produce collagen.  Collagen is a type of tissue that gives skin its elasticity and helps prevent wrinkles and skin sagging.


Does Mangiferin Prevent Cancer?

mango-health-benefits

Mangoes may protect against cancer. The fruit packs over a dozen types of polyphenols.

Mangoes are a good source of Mangiferin. Mangiferin (1,3,6,7-tetrahydroxyxanthone-C2-ß-D-glucoside) is a bioactive ingredient predominantly isolated from the mango tree and fruits, with potent antioxidant activity and multifactorial pharmacological effects.

Mangiferin protects against several human cancers, including lung, colon, breast, and neuronal cancers, through the suppression of tumor necrosis factor a expression, inducible nitric oxide synthase potential, and proliferation and induction of apoptosis.

Several research studies indicated also its ability to inhibit cancerogenesis and cancer cells growth by apoptosis induction in vitro and in vivo. 

Mangiferin is also antidiabetic, antitumor, lipometabolism regulating, cardioprotective, anti-hyperuricemic, neuroprotective, antioxidant, anti-inflammatory, antipyretic, analgesic, antibacterial, anti-viral and immunomodulatory effects. 

Based in latest scientific studies, mangiferin decreased diabetic-enhanced lipid peroxidation products - thiobarbituric acid reactive substances (TBARS) formed as degradation products of fats - down to the healthy level.

It is also used in cosmetics, due to antioxidant and UV-protecting properties.



REFERENCES:

David W. Group. 2015. Encyclopedia of Mind Enhancing Foods, Drugs and Nutritional Substances, 2nd Revised Edition. McFarland. ISBN-13: 978-0786441426

Dilshara MG, Kang CH, Choi YH, Kim GY. Mangiferin inhibits tumor necrosis factor-a-induced matrix metalloproteinase-9 expression and cellular invasion by suppressing nuclear factor-?B activity. BMB Rep. 2015;48(10):559–64. doi: 10.5483/BMBRep.2015.48.10.003.

He L, Peng X, Zhu J, Chen X, Liu H, Tang C, Dong Z, Liu F, Peng Y. Mangiferin attenuate sepsisinduced acute kidney injury via antioxidant and anti-inflammatory effects. Am J Nephrol. 2014; 40(5):441–50. doi: 10.1159/000369220.

Kostermans, AJHG; Bompard, JM. 1993. The Mangoes: Their Botany, Nomenclature, Horticulture and Utilization. (https://books.google.com/books?id=UpstquPSMYoC). Academic Press. ISBN 978-0-12-421920-5.

Li H, Huang J, Yang B, Xiang T, Yin X, Peng W, Cheng W, Wan J, Luo F, Li H, Ren G. Mangiferin exerts antitumor activity in breast cancer cells by regulating matrix metalloproteinases, epithelial to mesenchymal transition, and ß-catenin signaling pathway. Toxicol Appl Pharmacol. 2013; 272(1):180– 90. doi: 10.1016/j.taap.2013.05.011.

Muhammad Imran, Muhammad Sajid Arshad, Masood Sadiq Butt, Joong-Ho Kwon, Muhammad Umair Arshad, and Muhammad Tauseef Sultan. 2017. Mangiferin: a natural miracle bioactive compound against lifestyle related disorders. Lipids Health Dis. 2017; 16: 84. BioMed Central. Published online 2017 May 2. doi: 10.1186/s12944-017-0449-y. PMCID: PMC5414237. PMID: 28464819. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5414237/

Peng ZG, Yao YB, Yang J, Tang YL, Huang X. Mangiferin induces cell cycle arrest at G2/M phase through ATR-Chk1 pathway in HL-60 leukemia cells. Genet Mol Res. 2015;14 (2):4989–5002. doi: 10.4238/2015.May.12.2.

Rajendran P, Rengarajan T, Nandakumar N, Divya H, Nishigaki I. Mangiferin in cancer chemoprevention and treatment: pharmacokinetics and molecular targets. J Recept Signal Transduct Res. 2015; 35(1):76–84. doi: 10.3109/10799893.2014.931431.

Rajendran P, Rengarajan T, Nishigaki Y, Palaniswami R, Nishigaki I. In vitro studies on Mangiferin protection against cadmium-induced human renal endothelial damage and cell death via the MAP kinase and NF-?B pathways. J Recept Signal Transduct Res. 2016; 36(1):57–66. doi: 10.3109/10799893.2015.1019137.

Rajneet K Khurana, Rajneet K Khurana; Kaur, Ranjot; Lohan, Shikha; K Singh, Kamalinder; Singh, Bhupinder. 2016. "Mangiferin: a promising anticancer bioactive" (https://www.future-science.com/do i/10.4155/ppa-2016-0003). PHARMACEUTICAL PATENT ANALYST. 5 (3) – via Future science.

Robert Krause, Molly Krause. 2013. The Flavorful Kitchen Cookbook: 101 Amazing 3-Ingredient Flavor Combinations. Fair Winds Press. ISBN-10: 1592335896

No comments:

Post a Comment

Disclosure | Disclaimer |Comments Policy |Terms of Use | Privacy Policy| Blog Sitemap

 

 

The information contained herein is provided as a public service with the understanding that this site makes no warranties, either expressed or implied, concerning the accuracy, completeness, reliability, or suitability of the information. Nor does warrant that the use of this information is free of any claims of copyright infringement. This site do not endorse any commercial providers or their products.

 

Culinary Physics Blog: Exceptional food that worth a special journey. Distinctive dishes are precisely prepared, using fresh ingredients. And all other foods that can kill you. Culinary Physics is a Molecular Gastronomy blog specializing in molecular gastronomy recipes-food style, molecular book review, molecular gastronomy kit review and molecular gastronomy restaurants guide.

 

Culinary Physics Blog is your comprehensive source of Australian cuisine recipes, Austrian cuisine recipes, Brazilian cuisine recipes, Caribbean cuisine recipes, Chinese cuisine recipes, Cuban cuisine recipes, East African cuisine recipes, English cuisine recipes, French cuisine recipes, German cuisine recipes, Greek cuisine recipes, Hungarian cuisine recipes, Indian cuisine recipes, Indonesian cuisine recipes, Israeli cuisine recipes, Italian cuisine recipes, Japanese cuisine recipes, Korean cuisine recipes, Lebanese cuisine recipes, Mexican cuisine recipes, North African cuisine recipes, Norwegian cuisine recipes, Philippine cuisine recipes, Polish cuisine recipes, Russian cuisine recipes, South American cuisine recipes, Spanish cuisine recipes, Thai cuisine recipes, Turkish cuisine recipes, Vietnamese cuisine recipes and West African cuisine recipes.

 

2011- 2022 All Rights Reserved. Culinary Physics Blog

http://culinaryphysics.blogspot.com