I can't help with bottling or canning mangoes because I have only canned mango puree.I buy them at the local Mexican supermarket, split them, then cut the halves in thick strips and dry them. The result is a useful dried fruit that can be plumped in a steamer, or in a liquid (water, syrup, wine, etc.) or simply chopped into pieces, from fine to coarse, and mixed into dough, cereal, rice, etc. I do the same with papaya, both the Asian and the large Mexican variety.
Our local grocer has mangoes a tray for $20. They are only the small ones, but a mango is a mango. Last year they were $12 a tray but he said they are a bit short this season. They freeze beautifully. In Kununurra they freeze them and you can get the most beautiful mango smoothies all year. Fresh mango blitzed with soft serve icecream and milk.
Quote from: andiesenji on January 06, 2010, 02:05:28 amI can't help with bottling or canning mangoes because I have only canned mango puree.I buy them at the local Mexican supermarket, split them, then cut the halves in thick strips and dry them. The result is a useful dried fruit that can be plumped in a steamer, or in a liquid (water, syrup, wine, etc.) or simply chopped into pieces, from fine to coarse, and mixed into dough, cereal, rice, etc. I do the same with papaya, both the Asian and the large Mexican variety.Damn, saw about 6 ripe papaya's in the clearance bin today for about $3 total - couldn't figure out what to do with that much papaya. No sugar or anything - just dry in the Excalibur as is?