Mango is one of the popular fruits in the world due to its attractive color, delicious taste and excellent nutritional properties. Known for its sweet fragrance and flavor, the mango has delighted the senses for more than 4000 years. A celebrated fruit, mango, now produced in most of the tropical parts of the globe.
Showing posts with label color. Show all posts
Showing posts with label color. Show all posts

Thursday, June 2, 2016

What is the texture of mango?

The sensory characteristics used, for the fruit and the flesh of the mangoes, were skin color, fruit size, flesh texture and overall liking for the flesh.

The mango skin is smooth and shiny and its color varies in hue from very green to bright, wild red or yellow, depending on its variety and how ripe it is.

The fruit flesh of a ripe mango is very sweet with a unique taste. The texture of the flesh varies markedly between different cultivars, some having a soft, pulpy texture similar to an over-ripe plum, whole others having firmer flesh like a cantaloupe or avocado.

In some cultivars, the flesh has a fibrous texture. The better mangoes have firm but yielding sweet flesh that is rich and dense and has not gotten too stringy.
What is the texture of mango?

Monday, November 9, 2015

Mango fruit development

Time from flowering to fruit maturity takes 3-6 months depending upon cultivar and temperatures. Among fruit growth follows a typical sigmoidal pattern with the seed developing first followed by a final rapid increase in mesocarp (pulp) as fruit near maturity.

Carbon assimilation by fruits is generally greatest during the early stages of growth with respiratory losses from exceeding photosynthetic gains for the duration of ontogeny.

The color of unripe pulp turns from creamy white to yellow-orange ripening in most cultivars while peel color turns from green to yellow of red often with a red or orange blush depending on the cultivar.

The color change in the peel is mainly cause by the conversion of chlorophyll to the colorless chemical called phytol.

Fruits with mesocarp that is dry at maturity are classified as dry fruits (such as grains, beans, peas and nuts) and fruits with a mesocarp that is least parity fleshy at maturity are classified as fleshy fruit.

Fully mature mango fruit are strictly those which have produced a fully developed seed and which have reached their full physiological potential in relation to seize increase and dry matter accumulation within the constraints of the growth environment.

If fruit are not harvested maturation and ripening occur on the tree. Ripe fruit fall to the ground, or are consumed by bats, primates, phalangers, birds or humans, either on the tree or after detachment.
Mango fruit development

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