Three Drinks To Make With Mangoes

As much as the rain is still upon us, the sun still shines almost every day. Some days can be mild and some days can be scorching. The good thing about weather like this is the blessings that come with it. The fresh produce (I’m sure I have mentioned it before), air and many more things that we take for granted. Fruits are in season. Especially the mangoes and it is a wonderful moment…almost bitter sweet. Being surrounded by all types and sizes of mangoes either from local markets, street vendors or mere mango trees. It brings out the beauty of fresh fruit.

The feeling of plucking(more of stoning really!) a fresh fruit from a tree and eating it as it is(after washing), juicing it or simply making something really good out of it is so satisfying. I hope you find this mango season a blessing…a satisfying blessing. There are a few drinks I have made on the blog here and I was thinking with all these abundant mangoes, why can’t we substitute them and get drinking or sipping. So here are three drinks to make with mangoes.

Papaya slushie

 

Lemongrass flavored passion fruit juice

 

DSC09347tAvocado shake

 

By simply substituting the fruit in the recipe for mangoes, you can have the goodness of mangoes. Hope you get juicing.

What other ways are you eating your mangoes? Also, what one thing do you love about this weather?

 

🙂

Sophie

 

PS: Currently I am trying to make ice cream…or something like it. Will let you know soon.

Tea Masala Mango-Pear Pie

Its mango season y’all. You wont believe how exciting this time is for almost everyone. It is where kids damage things because the  stoning of the mangoes gets out of hand, where tree owners become protective of their mangoes stating that all children should wait till the mangoes are ripe. But what is the fun in that really? I personally have equal excitement when eating both raw and ripe mangoes except that the former is more fun(salt and piripiri anyone?).  So as the season slowly climaxes, generous neighbors are giving away mangoes because, well, if they don’t, they will rot and nobody wants that.

I have been searching far and wide(A.K.A Google) the meaning of ‘from scratch’. because I have always questioned the concept behind it.  Based on what I gathered and understood, cooking from scratch means cooking and  using  items or rather ingredients within your reach, your house or garden(and neighbors?!?).  In a  way this pie was made from scratch and you don’t need a lot of fancy ingredients really. Let me show you how.

What you’ll need:

Pie dough
2 C. Baking flour
½ C. Margarine (blue band)/ Butter
1/2 C. Cold water
2 Tsp. Sugar
½ Tsp. Salt

For the filling

2 Ripe mangoes

1/2 Pear

1/2 Tsp. Tea masala

1 Tbsp. Sugar

1/2 Tsp. Lemon Juice

Method

Sift flour in a bowl. Add salt and sugar. Mix well. Add margarine and using your hands mix it in the flour until the mixture becomes coarse. Next add the water, a tablespoon at a time, while mixing. Keep adding little water until a firm dough is formed. It should not be very wet and should not stick to your hands so much (you may need more or less water). After you have formed the dough, put it back in the bowl and keep it refrigerated for 15 minutes.

Peel and thinly slice the mangoes. Put in a bowl and set aside. Thinly slice the pear and add in bowl. Add the tea masala, sugar and lemon juice and mix well.

After 15 minutes, remove from the refrigerator and, on a floured surface, cut the dough into two equal parts. Using a floured rolling-pin or a glass bottle, roll the dough out till it is large enough (think chapatti size). Roll the second part of the dough too. Arrange the mango and pear slices on top center of the pie dough. Make sure you leave enough space for folding the dough. Fold the dough on top of the filling.

Bake in an oven until the crust starts to brown a little. This can take an approximation of 15 to 20 minutes depending on the oven you are using. I use an oven toaster(!).
Remove from the oven and let the pie cool and then serve.

Do you prefer raw or ripe mangoes?

Apart from juicing,  what do you plan on doing with the excess ripe mangoes?

Have a great week.

🙂

Sophie

PS: If you don’t fancy tea masala, you can substitute it for anything else like cinnamon.

Sautéed Dodo(Amaranth)

As much as time is flying by, the rain is still sticking around. There is freshness overload. From fresh green grass (which now needs to be trimmed every week) to fresh rain washed air. From fresh rain-soaked earth to fresh vegetables all over. Among those vegetables  is the dodo/ amaranth. It is so glorious you can’t deny it. I have experimented with dodo a lot and have found that it tastes really great raw (think salad) but I am yet to polish the art of making raw dodo salad. In the meantime I will be sharing this sautéed dodo recipe. It is a healthy dish, I believe, that is sautéed in little oil and is not overcooked and thus it has a slight bite to it. I find dodo a great breakfast vegetable because it is an energizer.

What you will need:

Three handfuls of  fresh dodo

1 Tomato, chopped

1/2 C. Spring Onions, chopped

1 Small purple onion, chopped

Cooking oil

Salt

Method

Wash the dodo thoroughly and dry then set aside. Pour a tablespoon of cooking oil in a hot pan. Add the onions and stir for a minute.Add salt. Next add the tomatoes and keep stirring till they are soft. Add the dodo  and stir well making sure it is well mixed with the tomatoes and onions. Wait for a few minutes or until the dodo turns a bright green color and then remove it from fire.  Serve as a side dish.

I want to know how you prepare dodo. Leave a comment below.

 

🙂

Sophie