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Health
See other Health Articles

Title: 6 Reasons to Love Mangoes
Source: [None]
URL Source: http://blogs.webmd.com/food-and-nut ... 6-reasons-to-love-mangoes.html
Published: Jun 2, 2016
Author: Katherine Brooking, MS, RD/ AppforHealth
Post Date: 2016-11-06 03:35:57 by Tatarewicz
Keywords: None
Views: 59
Comments: 2

WbMD...

While they’re one of the most popular fruits in the world, mangoes are still considered exotic in the US. If you’re unfamiliar with all this fruit has to offer, read on to learn 6 surprising facts that might make you mad for mangoes.

1. Mangoes may help whittle your middle.

They may seem more like a decadent dessert than a healthy fruit, but mangoes are diet-friendly. Because they’re naturally sweet, eating them can help quash your cravings for candy or other sugary foods. A one-cup serving of fresh mango has 100 calories, and because that same serving has three grams of filling fiber, you’ll feel fuller on fewer calories. In fact, mangoes are 83% water by weight, and research from Penn State University has shown that eating foods that have a high water content (and lower energy density) help to keep you fuller while eating less. In fact, one of their studies found that eating a piece of fruit before a meal reduced the calories consumed at that meal by 15 percent.

2. They pack a powerful nutrition punch.

Bursting with over 20 vitamins and minerals, mangoes are loaded with good nutrition and health benefits. Just one cup provides 100% of our daily vitamin C needs, helping to strengthen our immune system, keep our teeth and gums healthy, and support collagen formation–hello, beautiful skin! Mangoes are also rich in fiber, a nutrient that helps you to fill up—not weigh you down.

3. Mangoes may temper inflammation.

Mangoes contain several anti-inflammatory compounds, including vitamin C and beta carotene. And a recent study published in the journal of Molecular Nutrition & Food Research, found that mango has the potential to enhance the diet as a source of gallic acid and gallotannins which may possess anti-inflammatory and anti-carcinogenic properties.

4. They’re easier to cut and peel than you think.

Stumped about the best way to slice a mango? Just place the fruit on the cutting board stem-end down and hold. Then, take a sharp knife and cut just off-center, about ¼ of an inch. Repeat on the other side so that you have two mango cheeks. Take the first half and cut parallel slices or a checkerboard pattern into the mango flesh, being careful not to cut through the skin. Scoop the slices or cubes out with a spoon. If you want smaller cubes for a recipe, simply make the cuts closer together. Easy!

5. Red doesn’t equal ripe.

A red mango isn’t always a ripe mango! To know if it’s ready to eat, squeeze it gently. A ripe mango will give slightly. Like more familiar fruits, such as peaches and avocado, mangoes also become softer as they ripen. If a mango is firmer than desired, set it on the countertop, where it will continue to ripen. To speed up the process, place mangoes in a paper bag at room temperature. Once ripe, mangoes can be stored in the refrigerator for up to 5 days.

6. Fresh mangoes are available year-round

Good news – whether you need your mango fix in June, December or any month of the year, you’ll likely be able to find at least one of the six main varieties. Each variety has a unique flavor and texture, so try different ones throughout the year.

So, consider adding mangoes to your fruit line-up – there’s no limit to how you can use them. You can whip up a tropical mango salsa to use as a topper for grilled fish, create a crab-mango crostini hors d’oeuvre, mix with low-fat yogurt and ice cubes for a refreshing smoothie, treat yourself to a light and delicious mango sorbet or slice this versatile fruit into thin strips and roll with a slice of deli meat. You can also purée mango and drizzle over grilled chicken or fish for a splash of color and blast of vitamins and minerals—the possibilities are endless!

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#1. To: Tatarewicz (#0)

The quality of mangoes in the stores at the present time is not very good. They are firm and it's difficult to cut the fruit off of the seed. They go from that state to rotten. I guess it's because it's off-season in central/south America.

I use them for smoothies. I don't like bananas, so it's difficult to make a good smoothie without a mango - not very smooth without them. LOL. Without either a banana or a mango, the smoothies are too watery.

I use the NutriBullet and add: mango, apple, cucumber, carrot, beet, celery and fresh greens from the greenhouse. Then I add a little orange juice, unless I add orange segments earlier. Yum!

ratcat  posted on  2016-11-06   11:13:09 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#2. To: ratcat (#1) (Edited)

They are firm and it's difficult to cut the fruit off of the seed

Last case I got from local discount store, ten for $5, was great; large fruit, sweet flesh, thin stone. I use a serrated teaspoon to scrape flesh off stone, etc. Quality probably depends on how green when picked. Thanks for recipe.

An overview of preharvest factors influencing mango fruit growth, quality and postharvest behaviour

Brazilian Journal of Plant Physiology

In this review, we emphasize the fact that final mango quality at the consumer level depends not only on the maturity stage at harvest and postharvest conditions during storage and marketing, but on environmental factors as well. These factors can be controlled by various cultural practices, i.e. light and temperature through tree pruning, carbon availability through fruit thinning, or water availability through irrigation management. The research on mango presented in this paper has been carried out to help us to develop an understanding of how environmental factors affect fruit growth and its quality on the tree, fruit postharvest behaviour and final fruit quality.

...Another quality criterion, soluble solids content (Mendoza and Wills, 1984) and total sugars (Table 1), which can be related to dry matter content, were determined to be lower in mango fruit from the lower portion of the canopy. Using the modelling approach, especially through sensitivity analysis, it has been shown that the final fruit dry mass is sensitive to carbon assimilation parameters.

...increasing the leaf-to-fruit ratio from 50 to 100 leaves per fruit increased source size and thus carbon availability, and lead to fruit with higher sugar contents in the flesh.

...Changing carbon availability to fruit influenced both the dry mass and the water mass of its three main compartments: skin, pulp and stone

...The position of fruit in a mango tree affected the time between harvest and the climacteric crisis, as shown by the faster ripening of mangoes from the upper canopy (Hofman et al., 1995), which had the highest pulp dry matter content as well....

Bagging also influences mango quality to a small degree. However, fruit bagged with plastic softened faster than unbagged fruit. Shelf life, as measured in days to fruit softening, was significantly reduced by bagging fruit with plastic bags. Therefore, bagging fruit influenced postharvest behaviour of mango, especially water exchanges during storage. In fact, water loss of fruit during storage significantly increased (Hofman et al., 1997; Joyce et al., 1997) as a result of bagging with plastic bags during fruit development

FINAL COMMENTS

Environmental factors are one of the main sources of variation of mango quality, as has been described in various studies and reviewed in this paper. These preharvest factors affect both fruit growth during its development by changing the accumulation of water and dry matter, including biochemical and mineral compounds, and fruit behaviour during its storage. Having knowledge of and then being able to control changes in fruit quality in response to environmental conditions may be essential to adopting cultural practices that will provide high quality fruits and to defining optimal postharvest procedures that will take fruit production conditions into account. A way to improve final mango quality traits such as size, colour, taste, nutritional value and flavour is also to build an integrated approach that links the two categories of factors, preharvest and postharvest, which influence the various components of mango quality. This approach can combine experiments and models since fruit is a highly complex system.

www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1677-04202007000400004

Tatarewicz  posted on  2016-11-06   21:20:29 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


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