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Thursday, May 29, 2014

ျမန္မာ့သရက္သီး ႏွင့္ အိႏိၵယ သရက္သီး ဘာကြာျခားလဲ!


ျမန္မာ့သရက္သီး စိန္တလံုုးကိုု စကာၤပူကိုုျဖန္႔ခ်ိေနၿပီး ႏိုင္ငံတကာျဖန္႔ဖိုု႔ သူငယ္ခ်င္းတေယာက္ႀကိဳးစား ေနတာကိုု ေတြ႕ရလိုု႔ စိတ္၀င္စားစရာေကာင္းတဲ့ သရက္သီးေလး အေၾကာင္းကိုု ေလ့လာၾကည့္တာပါ....
ျမန္မာ့သရက္သီးကိုု စားခ်င္လိုု႔ Supermarketႏွင့္  ေစ်းေတြမွာ ေတာ္ေတာ္ကိုု ရွာေဖြယူရတယ္ဗ်...

ရွာေတြ႔တယ္ Clementi,Bukit Batok ေစ်းထဲက ၁၀လံုုးကိုု ၁၅ေဒၚလာ ဘဲေပးရေတာ့ ေစ်းေပါတာႏွင့္ လက္က်န္ ၁၀လံုုး ကုုိအျပတ္ျဖတ္၀ယ္ခဲ့တယ္ေလ...ေမႊးၿပီးခ်ိဳတာႏွင့္ ေနာက္ရက္ ေတြမွာ သြားၾကည့္ေတာ့မေတြ႔ရေတာ့ဘူး...
ဒီေလာက္ေတာင္ရွားပါးတဲ့ စိန္တလံုုးေလးပါ....
ဒါႏွင့္ Shop & Save ဆိုုင္မွာ အိႏိၵယ Bangpalli သရက္သီးေလးကိုု တလံုုး ၁.၇၀ ေဒၚလာဆိုုေတာ့ ေစ်းေပါတာႏွင့္ စမ္းစားၾကည့္လိုုက္ေတာ့ မဆိုုးပါဘူး။ တခါမွာ ဒီသရက္သီး အရာသာမ်ိဳး မစားဖူးေသး ပါဘူး ဒီသရက္သီးက မွည့္မွ အနံ႔ေမႊးလာၿပီး စစားစားခ်င္း ခ်ဥ္မလိုုလိုုႏွင့္ ခ်ိုဳတယ္ဗ် ... တျခားထိုုင္းသီးေတြထက္ ပိုုေကာင္းတယ္ဗ်...

 ဒီပံုုထဲက စိန္တလံုုးႏွင့္  Bangapalli သရက္သီးယွဥ္ျပထားတာ....

ျမန္မာ့စိန္တလံုုးက ေမႊးၿပီး ပိုုခ်ိဳၿပီး အလံုုးေသးတယ္...
မႏွစ္က ေတာ့ အလံုုးပိုုႀကီးၿပီး ၃လံုုး $ ၁၀ေလာက္ေပးရတယ္.
အိႏိၵယ  Bagapalli သရက္သီး က အလံုုးပိုုႀကီးႀကီးၿပီး (မခ်စ္စုုသရက္သီးအလံုုးနီးပါး)အခ်ိဴအရာ တမ်ိဳးစီပါ...


ဒီ  ၂၀၁၄ႏွစ္ထဲမွာ အိႏိၵယ  နာမည္ေက်ာ္ Alphonso သရက္သီးလဲ  Rs1200-700-400 ထိ ေစ်းတအားကိုုထိုုး က်ေနေတာ့ ....

အိႏိၵယ Bagapalli  သရက္သီးဆိုု $ ၁.၇၀ ေ လာက္ ထိ ေစ်းေပါတယ္... မႏွစ္က  $ ၃ ေလာက္ရွိတယ္ ေလ.





စိန္တလံုးသရက္ ႏွစ္ ၂၀ အတြင္း ေစ်းအျမင့္ဆံုး ရရွိ

မႏၲေလး – ျပင္ဦးလြင္ ကားလမ္းေပၚတြင္ ေရာင္းခ်လွ်က္ ရွိေသာ စိန္တလုံး သရက္သီးဆုိင္ တဆုိင္္ကုိ ေတြ႕ရစဥ္ (ဓာတ္ပုံ – မန္းသားေလး / ဧရာ၀တီ)
 တ႐ုတ္သို႔ တင္ပို႔ေနေသာ စိန္တလံုး သရက္သီး ေစ်းကြက္သည္ ႏွစ္ေပါင္း ၂၀ ေက်ာ္အတြင္း အျမင့္ ဆုံးေစ်းႏွင့္ အေရာင္းအ၀ယ္ ျဖစ္ေန ေၾကာင္း သိရသည္။

ျမန္မာျပည္တြင္းတြင္ သရက္သီး အထြက္ႏႈန္း နည္းပါးျခင္း၊ စိုက္ပ်ိဳး နည္းစနစ္ ေကာင္းမြန္လာျခင္း၊ အသီး အရည္အေသြး ေကာင္းမြန္ လာျခင္းႏွင့္ တ႐ုတ္ယြမ္ေငြ လဲလွယ္ႏႈန္း အတက္ႏွင့္ တုိက္ဆုိင္ျခင္း တို႔ေၾကာင့္ သရက္သီးမ်ား ေစ်းေကာင္းရျခင္း ျဖစ္ေၾကာင္း မႏၲေလးတုိင္း သရက္သီးအစုဖြဲ႕မွ ဥကၠ႒ ေဒၚသန္းသန္းေဆြက ဧရာ၀တီသို႔ ေျပာသည္။
“မႏွစ္က သရက္သီးေတြက အိတ္မစြပ္ၾကေတာ့ ေစ်းႏွိမ္ခံရတယ္ေလ။ အဲဒီေတာ့ ဒီႏွစ္ သရက္ကုန္သည္ေတြက အိတ္စြပ္ၾကတယ္။ အိတ္စြပ္ေတာ့ ေစ်းေကာင္း ပုိရတာေပါ့။ ဒီႏွစ္ သရက္သီးေတြက တခါမွ မရခဲ့ဖူးတဲ့ ေစ်းေတြနဲ႔ ရတယ္။ အသီးက ရွားသြားတာလည္း ပါတယ္” ဟု ၎က ရွင္းျပသည္။
ယခုႏွစ္ ေဖေဖာ္၀ါရီလမွ စတင္ၿပီး သရက္ အမ်ားအျပား ပြင့္ခဲ့ေသာ္လည္း ရာသီဥတု ေဖာက္ျပန္မႈေၾကာင့္ အပြင့္မ်ား၌ မိႈျဖဴ မႈိမည္းမ်ား က်ခဲ့ေၾကာင္း၊ မႈိစစြဲသည္ကို အခ်ိန္မီ သိသူမ်ားက ေဆးျဖန္းႏိုင္ခဲ့ ေသာ္လည္း အပူ၊ အေအး မမွန္သည့္ ရာသီဥတု ေၾကာင့္ ေရဓာတ္ခန္းေျခာက္ကာ အပြင့္မ်ား ေႂကြက်ကုန္သည့္အျပင္ ေလျပင္းမ်ားပါ တုိက္ခတ္ခဲ့သျဖင့္ သရက္အပြင့္မ်ား ထပ္မံ ေႂကြက်ပ်က္စီးခဲ့ရေၾကာင္း သိရသည္။ ထို႔ေၾကာင့္ သရက္သီးမ်ား ရွားပါးကာ ေစ်းေကာင္းရျခင္း ျဖစ္သည္။
သရက္သီးဂ်ပ္ဖာ တဖာလွ်င္ တ႐ုတ္ယြမ္ေငြ ၁၂၀ ေစ်း ေရာင္းၾကရၿပီး ေမလလယ္ ေငြေၾကးလဲလွယ္ႏႈန္းအရ တ႐ုတ္ေငြ တယြမ္လွ်င္ ျမန္မာေငြ ၁၄၅ က်ပ္အထိ ေစ်းရွိေနသည္။
“အရင္ႏွစ္ေတြက သရက္သီးက ေစ်းသိပ္မရဘူး။ စ ေပၚကာစမွ ဂ်ပ္တဖာကုိ ယြမ္ ၈၀ နဲ႔ ၁၀၀ ေလာက္ ရတာ။ ေနာက္ပိုင္း က်ေတာ့ တဖာကုိ ယြမ္ ၇၀ ေလာက္ရဖို႔ မလြယ္ဘူး။ ဒီႏွစ္က်ေတာ့ ဂ်ပ္တဖာကုိ ယြမ္ ၁၂၀ နဲ႔ အထက္ကို ရခဲ့တယ္။ က်မတို႔ ေရာင္းလာတဲ့ ႏွစ္ေပါင္း ၂၀ ေက်ာ္ အတြင္းမွာ ေစ်းအေကာင္းဆုံးနဲ႔ အျမင့္ဆုံးပါပဲ” ဟု မူဆယ္ သစ္သီး၀လံ ကုန္စည္ဒိုင္မွ တာ၀န္ခံ ေဒၚနန္းနီနီမာက ေျပာသည္။
တ႐ုတ္ျပည္ဘက္မွ ကုန္သည္မ်ားသည္ ျမန္မာျပည္ထြက္ စိန္တလံုး သရက္သီးမ်ားကို အၿမဲ ေစ်းႏွိမ္၍ ၀ယ္ယူေလ့ရွိေၾကာင္း၊  ယခုႏွစ္သည္ သရက္သီး ရွားပါးျခင္းႏွင့္ အသီး အရည္အေသြး ေကာင္းမြန္ျခင္း တို႔ေၾကာင့္ မႀကဳံစဖူး ေစ်းေကာင္း ရရွိျခင္း ျဖစ္ၾကာင္း ၎က ဆက္ေျပာသည္။
သရက္သီး ဂ်ပ္ တဖာလွ်င္ ၁၅ ကီလုိရွိၿပီး ယင္းဖာတြင္ အသီး အႀကီးအေသးေပၚ မူတည္၍ အလုံး ၃၀ မွ ၅၀ အၾကား ပါ၀င္သည္။
စိန္တလုံး သရက္သီးကို ျပည္တြင္း၌ သာမက ျပည္ပႏိုင္ငံမ်ားကပါ ႀကိဳက္ႏွစ္သက္ ၾကသည္။ ၂၀၁၀ ျပည့္ႏွစ္မွ စတင္ကာ စိန္တလုံး သရက္မ်ိဳးမ်ားကို သရက္ၿခံ လုပ္ကိုင္သူမ်ား စိုက္ပ်ိဳးလာျခင္းျဖစ္သည္။
ယခင္က မခ်စ္စု၊ ဟသၤာ၊ ရင္ကြဲ၊ ပန္းဆြဲ၊ ျမေက်ာက္ႏွင့္ ေမ်ာက္ေခါင္းသီး သရက္မ်ိဳးမ်ား စုိက္ပ်ိဳးခဲ့ေသာ္လည္း ျပည္ပ ေစ်းကြက္တြင္ ပို၍ လူႀကိဳက္မ်ားသည္။
မႏၲေလးတိုင္းအတြင္းတြင္ စိန္တလုံး သရက္သီး စိုက္ပ်ိဳးသည့္ ဧကေပါင္း ႏွစ္ေသာင္းေက်ာ္ ရွိသည္။
စိန္တလုံး သရက္သီးမ်ားကုိ စင္ကာပူႏိုင္ငံသို႔ပါ တင္ပို႔လွ်က္ ရွိၿပီး စင္ကာပူေစ်းကြက္၌ အသီး တလုံးခ်င္းစီ၏ အေလးခ်ိန္ ဂရမ္ကုိသာ တြက္ၿပီး ေစ်းကြက္ ျဖစ္ေပၚသည္။ သရက္သီး တလုံးကုိ ၂၈၀ ဂရမ္မွ ၃၅၀ ဂရမ္ အၾကားရွိၿပီး အိတ္စြပ္သီးမွသာ လက္ခံသည္။
စင္ကာပူတြင္ စိန္တလုံး သရက္သီး တတန္ကို အေမရိကန္ ေဒၚလာ ၁,၂၀၀ အထိ ေစ်းရသည္။ တတန္လွ်င္ ကီလုိ ၁,၀၀၀ ရွိ၍ ဂ်ပ္တဖာလွ်င္ ၁၅ ကီလုိ ဆန္႔ေသာေၾကာင့္ တတန္လွ်င္ သရက္သီး ဂ်ပ္ဖာေပါင္း ၆၆ ဖာ ခန္႔ ရွိေၾကာင္း သိရသည္။(တလံုုးကိုု S$ ၀.၃၄ဆင့္)
အသီးအရည္အေသြး အေကင္းဆုံး သရက္သီးမ်ားကုိ ျမန္မာႏိုင္ငံ မႏၲေလးတိုင္း၊ ေက်ာက္ဆည္၊ စဥ့္ကိုင္၊ ပုသိမ္ႀကီး၊ ျမစ္ငယ္၊ တံတားဦး၊ ဟံျမင့္မိုရ္ႏွင့္ အုန္းေခ်ာတို႔မွ ထြက္ရွိၿပီး မူဆယ္ ၁၀၅ မိုင္ဘက္သို႔ အမ်ားဆုံး တင္ပို႔လွ်က္ ရွိသည္။
မူဆယ္ ၁၀၅ မိုင္ ကုန္သြယ္ေရး ဇုန္တြင္ ျမန္မာႏိုင္ငံ ဘက္ျခမ္းမွ တ႐ုတ္ႏိုင္ငံဘက္သို႔ ပုိ႔ကုန္ သြင္းကုန္ အေနျဖင့္ တေန႔လွ်င္ ကုန္ကားႀကီးေပါင္း အစီး ၇၀၀ ေက်ာ္ အ၀င္အထြက္ ရွိေၾကာင္း ယင္းဇုန္မွ သိရသည္။
ျမန္မာႏိုင္ငံမွ ျပည္ပသို႔ သရက္သီး တင္ပို႔ ေရာင္းခ်မႈမွာ ၂၀၁၁ -၂၀၁၂ ဘ႑ာေရးႏွစ္တြင္ တန္ခ်ိန္ ၄၀,၀၀၀ နီးပါး ရွိၿပီး  အေမရိကန္ ေဒၚလာ ၂၃ သန္းေက်ာ္ ရရွိခဲ့သည္။ ၂၀၁၃ ခုႏွစ္ ဇြန္လအထိ သရက္သီး တန္ခ်ိန္ ၃၃,၀၀၀ ေက်ာ္ တင္ပုိ႔ႏိုင္ခဲ့ၿပီး အေမရိကန္ ေဒၚလာ ၁၁ သန္း ရရွိေနၿပီျဖစ္ေၾကာင္း မႏၲေလး အျပည္ျပည္ဆုိင္ရာ ကုန္သြယ္မႈ ျမႇင့္တင္ေရး ဌာနခြဲက ဆုိသည္။

Ref:burma.irrawaddy.org

သရက္သီးလက္ကားေစ်း...http://www.alibaba.com/showroom/alphonso-mango-price.html

သရက္သီးက အေရွ႕ေတာင္အာရွမွာႏွစ္ေပါင္းေထာင္ခ်ီၿပီးေပါက္ေရာက္ေနတာပါ...
ကမၻာေပၚမွာ သရက္သီးအမ်ိဳးေပါင္း ၄၀၀ေက်ာ္ေလာက္ရွိတယ္...
တ၀က္ေက်ာ္ေလာက္ကအိႏိၵယက ထြက္တာပါ..ဒုတိယလုိက္တာက တရုတ္ပါ..

Production and consumption[edit]

The Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations estimates worldwide production at nearly 38,600,000 tonnes (42,500,000 short tons) in 2011 (table below).India is the biggest producer of mangoes with nearly 40% of world's production.


A basket of ripe mangoes
from Bangladesh


Ripe Sindhri mangoes
from SindhPakistan


Banganpalli mangoes being sold
in GunturIndia


Ripe mangoes being sold in a market in the Philippines

Mangoes have been cultivated in South Asia for thousands of years[12] and reached East Asia between the fifth and fourth centuries BC. By the 10th century AD, cultivation had begun in East Africa.[12] The 14th century Moroccan
traveler, Ibn Battuta, reported it at Mogadishu.[13] 
Cultivation came later to Brazil, the West Indies and Mexico, where an appropriate climate allows its growth.[12]
The mango is now cultivated in most frost-free tropical and warmer subtropical climates; almost half of the world's mangoes are cultivated in India alone, with the second-largest source beingChina.[14][15][16] Mangoes are also grown in Andalusia, Spain (mainly in Málaga province), as its coastal subtropical climate is one of the few places in mainland Europe that allows the growth of tropical plants and fruit trees. The Canary Islands are another notable Spanish producer of the fruit. Other cultivators include North America (in South Florida and California's Coachella Valley), South and Central America, the Caribbean, Hawai'i, south, west and central Africa, Australia, China, PakistanBangladesh, and Southeast Asia. Though India is the largest producer of mangoes, it accounts for less than one percent of the international mango trade; India consumes most of its own production.[17]
Many commercial cultivars are grafted on to the cold-hardy rootstock of Gomera-1 mango cultivar, originally from Cuba. Its root system is well adapted to coastal Mediterranean climate.[18] Many of the 1,000+ mango cultivars are easily cultivated using grafted saplings, ranging from the "turpentine mango" (named for its strong taste of turpentine[19]) to the huevos de toro.[citation needed] Dwarf or semi-dwarf varieties serve as ornamental plants and can be grown in containers. A wide variety of diseases can afflict mangoes; see List of mango diseases.

Many hundreds of named mango cultivars exist. In mango orchards, several cultivars are often crossed to improve pollination. Many desired cultivars are monoembryonic and must be propagated by grafting or they do not breed true. A common mono-embryonic cultivar is Alphonso, an important export product, considered as "the king of mangoes".[63]
Cultivars that excel in one climate may fail elsewhere. For example, Indian cultivars such as Julie, a prolific cultivar in Jamaica, require annual fungicide treatment to escape a lethalfungal disease known as anthracnose in Florida. Asian mangoes are resistant to anthracnose.
The current world market is dominated by the cultivar Tommy Atkins, a seedling of Hadenthat first fruited in 1940 in southern Florida, U.S. It was initially rejected commercially by Florida researchers.[71] For example, 80% of mangoes in UK supermarkets are Tommy Atkins. Despite its fibrous flesh and only fair taste,[citation needed] growers worldwide have embraced the cultivar for its exceptional productivity and disease resistance, shelf life, transportability, size and appealing color.
Alphonso, Benishaan and Kesar mango varieties are popular varieties in India's southern states, while the Chaunsa variety, among others, is popular in the northern states and Pakistan.
Guatemala markets sell a variety called 'mango de leche' which is more resinous outside and inside.
Generally, ripe mangoes have an orange-yellow or reddish peel and are juicy for eating, while exported fruit are often picked while underripe with green peels. Although producing ethylene while ripening, unripened exported mangoes do not have the same juiciness or flavor as fresh fruit.
Like other drupaceous fruits, mangoes come in both freestone and clingstone varieties.


http://www.un.int/protocol/manual_toc.html

Top producers of mangoes, mangosteens, guavas, 2011
Country/StateProduction inmillions of tons
 India
~ 15.19
 People's Republic of China
~ 4.35
 Thailand
~ 2.60
 Indonesia
~ 2.13
 Pakistan
~ 1.89
 Mexico
~ 1.83
 Brazil
~ 1.19
 Bangladesh
~ 0.89
 Nigeria
~ 0.85
 Philippines
~ 0.80
 World total
~ 38.95
        Source: UN FAOSTAT [70]

ဒါက သရက္သီးအမ်ားဆံုုးတင္ပိုု႔ေနတဲ့ အိႏိၵယက  နာမည္ေက်ာ္ Alphoso သရက္သီးေစ်းႏႈန္းေလးေတြ ကိုုယွဥ္ၾကည့္လိုုက္ရင္ ေစ်းႏႈန္းေလးေတြ အမ်ားႀကီးကိုုကြာျခားေနၿပီး တႏွစ္ပတ္လည္လံုုး ထြက္ရွိ ေအာင္ ေခတ္မွီနည္းေတြႏွင့္အမ်ားႀကီးကိုုႀကိဳးစားရပါအံုုးမယ္....




Get your favourite Alphonso mangoes delivered to you or your loved ones! You can now place an order online and have it shipped to select destinations in India or abroad. Alphonso mangoes will be delivered to select countries worldwide and over 5000 postal codes within India.
They are packaged in specially designed boxes while in transit, so that they are delivered fresh at your doorstep.

So place your order now to enjoy and savor fresh Mangoes this season!
You can place an order online or call our toll-free number 1800 22 6161 or 1800 209 6161.


 Alphonso (हापूस)



Alphonso  (known as Hapoos हापूस in Marathi) is a seasonal mango cultivar that is considered as one of the best in terms of sweetness, richness and flavor. It has considerable shelf life of a week after it is ripe making it exportable. It is also one of the most expensive kinds of mango and is grown mainly in western India. It is a seasonal fruit with each mango weighing between 150g and 300g each. This variety of mango has a very short season of about two months from the end of March till end May when the monsoon sets in the Konkan Region. 



The Alphonso Mango is named after Afonso de Albuquerque. This was an exquisite and expensive variety of mango that he used to bring on his journeys to Goa. The locals took to calling it Aphoos in Konkani and in Gujarati and Maharashtra the pronunciation got further transformed to Hapoos. This variety then was taken to the region of Maharashtra, South & central Gujarat and other parts of India.


The southern district of Mahrashtra Ratnagiri and Sindhudurg including regions around the Dapoli and Devgad Talukas, the southern districts of Valsad and Navsari in Gujarat state are the main regions where this mango is grown.The quality of the produce differs from northern areas to the southern districts as a result of the climatic changes.In Gujarat and Maharashtra, the finest fruit comes from a narrow strip of about 20 km from the seashore along the Konkan coast. The Alphonso Mango does not grow out of a seed. If you plant the seed after eating the fruit, you will get a mango tree, but it will bear mango fruits of a different variety. The journey of this Mango begins as a small twig cut out from the mother plant.It is then grafted on to a stem that has grown out of a mango seed of a sturdy variety.Some times one twig is planted into a combination of two stems from two seeds.It is planted into a plastic bag and put under intensive care for the next four years.It is kept in the bag for some months and then planted into a tin-can until it grows to a height of about 5 feet till about the fourth year. Only three out of five survive till the fourth year. In the fourth year, the bags are cut out and the little tree is planted in the orchard. Only four out of five survive till the sixth year.Over the next three-four years, the tree needs good care, with regular pruning so that it grows sideways, equally all around.It starts bearing good fruit since the ninth year. Since its a grafted tree and well maintained, you have fruits hanging between 0 to 25 feet from the ground.The maturity of this mango is defined in India’s traditional ‘anna’ system of currency, where 16 annas make up a rupee. A ’16 anna Mango’ is a 100% mature mango. Alphonso fruits are harvested at 14 anna level of maturity, by expert harvesters, who have acquired, by experience, the skill of identifying mature fruits from distances that can go as much as 25 feet. The fruit is harvested using a tool called ‘zela’ in the local language. It is a loose nylon-net basket held by metal ring, and attached to a bamboo pole which has a sharp V-shaped cutting tool at the front of the ring.The harvester tugs at the zela in a specific and careful manner, which does not disturb other fruits held from the same branch, does not result in any pull for the branch and yet cuts the stem from which the fruit is held, ensuring that a significant part of the fruit stem is still intact with the fruit. The fruits are taken out, and laid into a crate and immediately moved into a cool, shady place so as to shield the fruits from sunlight and heat.Most farmers get the crates of harvested fruits directly to the co-operative society, where they are graded, sorted and the farmer is paid accordingly.During the sorting process, each fruit is manually checked for hit marks, bird fly stings, pest scrape marks, sap burns, and other anomalies. After sorting, the mangoes are graded according to their weights.The fruit is then finally dispatched to the end consumer through wholesale fruit markets. The Devgad Alphonso is also amongst the most expensive sub-breeds of Alphonso. The Alphonso is generally referred to as 'Hapoos' throughout South Asia. Haapus is used to make sweets, candies and smoothies - Mango Milkshake, Mango Lassi (both smoothies), Aamba-Wadi (a somewhat chewy sweet), Aam-Ras (Mango pulp which is eaten with puris - an Indian Bread), Keri-no-Ras (Mango Pulp as known in Gujarati), Sakhar Amba (Marathi word for a home-made mango jelly/jam), Mango barfi (see Barfi), etc. Non aerated Mango drinks like Frooti (Parle Agro Co.), Jumpin (Godrej Industries Ltd), Maaza (Coca Cola Co.), Dukes Mangola and Slice (PepsiCo Inc.) are very popular in India. Many other local brands are also available.

Price List ( 1 U$= 58.84 Rs)
COUNTRY WISE PRICE LIST OF ALPHONSO MANGO GIFT PACK.

Country NameBox of 1 DozenBox of 2 Dozen
CanadaINR 6818INR 11135
Hong KongINR 5079INR 8545
IndiaINR 1599INR 3099
India - MumbaiINR 1199INR 2299
New ZealandINR 5999INR 10999
Saudi ArabiaINR 5999INR 10999
SingaporeINR 5079INR 8545
U.A.E.INR 4399INR 7949

-http://www.alphonsomdep.com/price.html
-http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/bangalore/Post-EU-ban-alphonso-prices-slide/articleshow/34499428.cms
-http://www.dnaindia.com/mumbai/report-prices-of-alphonso-mango-touch-all-time-low-in-navi-mumbai-1985775



Types Of Mango  King of Fruit
Add caption
Types Of Mango - King of Fruit

Well, there are more than one hundred types of mangoes available all over the world. Usually some types are found which are rich in taste in sub-continent and others are available in Southeast Asia and the rest of the world. Pakistan also has different and very tasty kinds of mangoes because the geographical location of Pakistan and its weather provides best suitable environment where a mango tree can grow very easily. Most famous types of mangoes usually found in Pakistan can be named as.



1) Chaunsa:

Types Of Mango  King of Fruit

it is considered as one of the best variety of mangoes available in Pakistan due to the taste it has and the richness it possesses. It is usually available from July to the beginning of September.


2) Langara: 

Types Of Mango  King of Fruit

it is another variety available in Pakistan. It has a green skin and it has brownish yellow color. It has a very sweet pulp. So it is best suited for making the mango juices and mango shakes.

3) Sindheri:



Types Of Mango  King of Fruit

it is another kind of mango available in Pakistan. It has the taste similar to Chaunsa types of mangoes but not actually has the same taste as a whole.


DUSEHRI Mango


Types Of Mango  King of Fruit

Colour is yellow when ripe, skin thin, pulp fibreless, fiesh firm, very sweet in taste, stone very small, mid season (July), keeping and peeling qualities good.

Anwar Ratole


Types Of Mango  King of Fruit

Arguably the best tasting mango, If you ask a mango lover. The name Ratole based on a Village name in India. That tree, and its successors, have bestowed fame, moderate affluence and, more recently, frustration on the people of Rataul village, arguably the mecca of Pakistani mango lovers.


Ratnagiri mango



Ratnagiri is a small idyllic coastal town – 330 kilometres south of Mumbai.
It is famous for golden Haapus or Alfonso mangoes and for the horse shoe shaped fort.



Alphonso Mango



Types Of Mango  King of Fruit

The Alphonso Mango is named after Afonso de Albuquerque. This was an exquisite and expensive variety of mango, that he used to bring on his journeys to Goa. The locals took to calling it Aphoos in Konkani and in Maharashtra the pronunciation got further transformed to Hapoos. This variety then was taken to the Konkan region of Maharashtra and other parts of India.

Sammar Bahisht mango

Types Of Mango  King of Fruit

Sammar Bahisht (in Urdu Sammar means fruit and Bahisht means Paradise) is a mango cultivar grown in different parts of the world.

It originated as a superior chance seedling in Muzaffarnagar Uttar Pradesh, India. It got its name because of its pleasant flavor. The fruit is medium with a slightly flattened base, equal shoulders, greenish yellow skin, and yellow pulp. It has a very sweet, pleasant flavor and is sparsely fibrous. The fruit also keeps well and peels easily. It ripens from July to August.


Fajri Mango



Types Of Mango  King of Fruit

both in its green and ripe form is a very good tenderizing agent and therefore ideal to include in any marinade. In Pakistan they use a sour mango powder containing ground up green mangoes called Achar, both as a seasoning and tenderizing aid.











ဒါက ကမာၻေက်ာ္နာမည္ႀကီးသရက္သီး(၃၈)မ်ိဳးေတြကိုု အရသာ၊အေရာင္လွပမႈ၊အပင္၊ထုုတ္လုုပ္မႈ၊
ေတြကိုုႏိႈင္းယွဥ္ျပထားတာပါ...

Mango Varieties(38)

Alampur Baneshan Mango - Photo by Ian Maguire
Alampur Baneshan is considered one of the finest dessert mangos of Northern India. This mid season bearer is another “condo mango” variety that can be maintained at a height of just ten feet. The fruit are oblong with a green skin and distinctive corky dots that cover the fruit's surface even when ripe. They are best harvested mature green and ripened at room temperature like the Mallika. The fruit typically weigh about 1 lb and ripen mid-June to July.

Alphonso Mango - Photo by Ian Maguire
Alphonso is a traditional Indian mango renowned for it’s rich flavor and smooth texture. When ripe the skin is greenish yellow to yellow and pulp is deep orange and highly aromatic. The trees tolerate the abundant rain and high humidity of South Florida very well which is somewhat unusual for traditional Indian types. This makes the tree a good producer of high quality fruit typically weighing 0.5-0.75 lbs and ripening in late June to July. 

Bailey's Marvel Mango - Photo by Ian Maguire
Bailey’s Marvel is firm, fiberless, and tangy yet sweet. Fruits are typically 1.5-2 pounds with a showy peach blush over a freckled yellow base. The tree is a handsome vigorous grower having a rounded symmetrical canopy and dense foliage. Juvenile trees are very sensitive disease and can be difficult to grow. The fruit ripens from mid-July to mid-August. 

Beverly Mango - Photo by Ian Maguire
Beverly is a good late season mango that can weigh up to three pounds. This sweet creamy fruit is firm, fiberless, and aromatic. All of this adds up to a delicious mango with abundant flesh available when most cultivars are through for the year. The only downfalls are its lackluster dull green color and the tree’s low spreading habit. The fruit ripens from mid-July to mid-August. 

Bombay Mango - Photo by Ian Maguire
Bombay is a Jamaican favorite popular for its ability to be twisted from the pit making the flesh readily available to be spooned out. The tree is a vigorous large grower with an open canopy. The fruit has a full rich mango flavor making you want to move your feet to the reggae beat. The fruit ripens from June to July.

Brahm Kai Meu - Photo by Ian Maguire
Brahm Kai Meu is a Thai selection revered for its excellent flavor while green and unripe. It is best eaten before any color change occurs. At this state it will be sweet and crunchy as an apple. The tree is an extremely prolific producer and grows with moderate vigor. The fruit ripens from June to July.

Carrie - Photo by Ian Maguire
Carrie is a fiberless Florida cultivar that is sickening sweet and delicious as can be. Its compact size makes it an excellent dooryard tree that requires minimal care. Both fruit and tree have little to no problem with fungus or disease. Lack of color and firmness are the only shortcomings of this superb variety. The fruit ripens from June to July.


Choc-Anon Mango - Photo by Ian Maguire
Choc-anon, also known as the Miracle Mango, is a Thai mango that fruits in the winter and often fruits in the summer of the same year producing two crops annually. The fruit are typically 0.75-1.0 lbs. and have a golden yellow skin when ripe. The pulp is sweet and firm with little to no objectionable fiber. The trees are vigorous growers with a densely foliated canopy and upright habit. This variety is an excellent choice for winter residents, and growers that want to extend their mango season beyond the traditional summer months. The fruit ripens from November-January and sometimes July as well.
Cogshall Mango - Photo by Ian Maguire
This “condo mango” is an ultra compact grower that produces sweet fiberless fruit. The tree is suitable for container growing on a balcony, or planting in a suburban backyard. It can easily be maintained at just eight feet tall, and it will still produce a good size crop year after year. The fruit ripens from June to July. Condo Mango

Cushman Mango - Photo by Ian Maguire
Cushman is an excellent mid to late season mango that resembles a grapefruit in size, shape, and color. The flesh is smooth, creamy, and completely fiberless. Although the tree is not the most aesthetically pleasing due to poor disease resistance, one bite will make you drop the axe. Four to six Kocide applications a year will make it a little easier on the eyes. The fruit ripens July to August.

Edward Mango - Photo by Ian Maguire
Edward is a fiberless cultivar that is sweet, aromatic, and considered by many to be the finest tasting of all Florida mangos. The skin is a golden yellow having a reddish blush where exposed to the sun. The tree is a vigorous large grower that is a consistent but poor producer. Like the Bailey's Marvel and the Keitt, the juvenile trees can be very difficult to grow. The fruit ripens from June to July.

Fairchild Mango - Photo by Ian Maguire
Fairchild is a fiberless Panamanian selection of excellent eating quality. The flesh is firm, juicy, and aromatic. The fruit itself is small and pale yellow, but the tree has attributes that make up for the less than stellar appearance. With very little effort the tree can be maintained at a height of ten feet and grown in a container. In fact, the Curator of Tropical Fruit at Fairchild Tropical Botanical Garden, Dr. Richard Campbell PH.D., has dubbed it a “condo mango” because it is conducive to being grown in a container. The fruit ripens June to July.

Florigon Mango - Photo by Ian Maguire
Florigon is a fiberless, disease resistant, early season cultivar that is extremely popular with dooryard growers for its quality, consistency, and precocity. The flesh is firm with a deep yellow color and mild flavor. The fruit ripens from Late May-July.
Glenn Mango - Photo by Ian Maguire
Glenn is a Haden seedling, and much like the Haden it is a Florida favorite. The fruit has a mild peachy flavor which is both sweet and delicious. It is of excellent eating quality, consistent production, and effortless to grow. Trees are typically fifteen feet tall with a rounded densely foliated canopy. The fruit ripens June to July making it our most popular early season mango.
Gold Nugget - Photo by Ian Maguire
Gold Nugget is another excellent virtually fiberless Florida mango. It is believed to be a seedling of Edwards, but has several advantages over it's probable parent. First and foremost Gold Nugget is extremely prolific which is in stark contrast to the shy bearing Edwards. Second, it fruits later in the year, making it one of the most sought after late season mangos. Finally, it has excellent harvesting and handling characteristics as compared to the delicate nature of the Edward. The tree itself is a large vigorous grower with an open canopy. The fruit ripens late July to August.
Graham - Photo by Ian Maguire
Graham is another “condo mango,” and it was introduced to Florida from Trinidad. The flesh is golden yellow, virtually fiberless, and especially aromatic. This long time Jamaican favorite is becoming extremely popular with Floridian homeowners who have space constraints. The tree can be maintained at just ten feet, and it will remain a generous bearer. The fruit ripens from late June to early August.


Haden - Photo by Ian Maguire
Haden was the first superior mango cultivar selected and named in Florida. The flesh has a full sweet flavor, and it is of excellent eating quality. The fruit is eye catching having a deep yellow base with a crimson blush. The tree is a vigorous large grower with an open rounded canopy. The only problems it has are disease resistance and a tendency to have “jelly seed”. The fuit are susceptible to spotting caused by fungus, and they tend to ripen from the inside out becoming slightly soft around the seed. The Haden remains an excellent variety for anyone that has the space for a medium to large tree. The fruit ripens from June to July.
Kensington Pride - Photo by Ian Maguire
Kensington Pride is the number one commercial variety in Australia. This heavy bearing medium sized tree grows to an average height of 15 - 25'. The fruit is smooth and colorful with a bright yellow skin and a red blush. The lemon yellow flesh is soft and juicy with a sweet aromatic flavor, and just a slight amount of fiber. The fruit is consumed ripe out of hand and is also well suited for pickles and sweet preserves at the firm-green stage. They typically weigh 1-1.5 lbs and ripen in July.

Kent - Photo by Ian Maguire
Kent was selected in Coconut Grove, Florida in 1945. The flesh is deep yellow, sweet, aromatic, and virtually fiberless. The tree is a large vigorous grower which can attain heights of fifty to sixty feet if unmanaged. The most rewarding attribute is a bountiful late season crop. The fruit ripens from July to August.

Lancetilla - Photo by Ian Maguire
Lancetilla is a Honduran selection made famous by Dr. Richard Campbell. Its debut at the 2001 International Mango Festival at Fairchild Tropical Botanical Gardens made it an instant South Florida sensation. Its immediate acceptance by homeowners can be attributed to the tree’s ability to be maintained at just ten feet. The five pound blood red fruit is firm, sweet, and completely fiberless. The fruit ripens from mid August to September.

Mallika - Photo by Ian Maguire
Mallika is a "condo mango" native to India. It has become a favorite here at PIN due to its superb flavor, unparalleled disease resistance, and small but extremely productive habit. There is a catch however. The fruit must be picked mature green for optimum flavor, and they are traditionally ripened in camel dung while on the way to market in India. They can also be packed in a cardboard box and kept at room temperature if camel dung is difficult to come by in your part of the world. Ripening typically takes ten to fourteen days. The season is from June to July.

Nam Doc Mai - Photo by Ian Maguire
Nam Doc Mai is a premium cultivar introduced to Florida from Thailand in 1973. It is hands down the most sought after of the Asian mangos and for good reason. The fruit is firm, sweet, aromatic, completely fiberless, and is born on a tree suitable to a small backyard. The fruit ripens from June to July.

Okrung - Photo by Ian Maguire
Okrung is another excellent Thai cultivar introduced to Florida in 1973. The fruit is traditionally served in Thailand in combination with sticky rice. The tree is a medium sized erect grower that will hold the fruit from June to August

Philippine - Photo by Ian Maguire
Philippine is a small fiberless fruit introduced to Florida from Cuba ironically. The flesh is soft, melting, and has a sweet rich flavor. The tree is a large vigorous grower well adapted to South Florida. The fruit ripens from June to July.
Pickering - Photo by Ian Maguire
Pickering is a “condo mango” that has everything for those with limited space, and it also remains a top selection for those looking for a new variety to put on the back forty. They naturally have a bushy, compact growth habit, and can be maintained in a container at just six feet. The fruit has a firm flesh with a fantastic coconut/mango flavor and no objectionable fiber. They are typically 0.75-1.5 lbs, and they ripen in June. 

Pim Saen Mun - Photo by Ian Maguire
Native to Southeast Asia, Pim Saen Mun is highly regarded for its smooth texture, pleasant aroma, and sweet flavor. The trees are large vigorous growers and prolific producers of half pound fruit that are pink and yellow when ripe. The fruit is best eaten fully ripe out of hand after being chilled, and they are typically harvested in July.

Po Pyu Kalay - Photo by Ian Maguire
Po Pyu Kalay is a unique Asian mango from the exotic nation of Myanmar (formerly Burma). The large vigorous tree produces small, yellow, elongated, somewhat pointed fruit with a bright lemon-yellow, moist, spicy, flesh. Commercially it has been dubbed the “Lemon Meringue” mango for its aroma.

San Felipe - Photo by Ian Maguire
San Felipe is a favorite among Cuban descendants, and it has many of the characteristics and benefits of Florida’s Haden. The tree is a fast grower that consistently produces colorful bright yellow fruit with an apple red blush overlaid by a blanket of white dots. The fruit weigh from fourteen ounces to just over one pound each and have a deep yellow to orange flesh which is rich, sweet, and spicy. As an early season producer it’s disease resistance is boosted, because they are harvested before the worst of the summer showers. The fruit typically ripen in June.
Springfels - Photo by Ian Maguire
Springfels is a Haden seedling selected in West Palm Beach, Florida in 1925. The fruit is large (to 3lbs), colorful, and of good eating quality. The tree has a low spreading habit but can attain heights over twenty feet. It is no longer a popular variety due to uneven ripening and the availability of superior cultivars. The fruit ripens from July to August. 

Tebow - Photo by Ian Maguire
Named for Heisman Trophy winner and Florida Gator quarterback Tim Tebow, this hybrid located at the University of Florida Tropical Research and Education Center is a real champion. Like the dual virtues of Tim’s running and passing game, the Tebow Mango has the venerable virtues of both quality and production. By crossing an Edward with a Kent in 1972 David Sturrock of West Palm Beach, Florida developed a fruit that has the production qualities of the Kent and the incredible eating qualities of the Edward. The fruit was originally dubbed the Young, and most likely went unnoticed for decades simply because of it's yellow skin which was undesirable to commercial growers. Born on a large tree the fruit is yellow and pink when ripe, completely fiberless, and weigh about one pound each. It is a mid to late season bearer ripening from mid July to August. 

Tommy Atkins - Photo by Ian Maguire
Tommy Atkins is another Haden seedling selected here in Florida. It has become the most extensively planted export mango in the New World and it is the benchmark of the commercial mango industry. It's color, disease resistance, and storage qualities appeal to merchants and consumers worldwide. The fruit ripens June to July. 
Valencia Pride - Photo by Ian Maguire
Valencia Pride Is yet another Haden seedling selected and named in Florida in 1941. The flesh is sweet, aromatic, firm, and fiberless. The tree is a vigorous large grower making it an excellent shade tree complemented by an exceptionally attractive fruit. It has one of the finest flavors of all of the late season varieties and it never disappoints. The fruit ripens July to August. 
Van Dyke - Photo by Ian Maguire
Van Dyke is an eye catching Florida cultivar which enjoys wide acceptance throughout Europe. The fiberless fruit has a rich sweet flavor that is both spicy and sweet. Its excellent disease resistance is complemented by exceptional color. The fruit ripens July to August

Van Dyke - Photo by Ian Maguire
Zill is a Haden seedling selected in Lake Worth , Florida in 1940. The fruit are born in clusters and have a tendancy to ripen all at the same time. The flesh is firm, juicy, and has a very pleasant aroma. The flavor is sweet having just a hint of pineapple. The fruit ripens from June to early July. 


Credit @ Ko Nge

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