Fresh ripe Alphonso mango pulp lightly sweetened, flavoured with cardamom and saffron, served chilled alongside hot puris. The most eagerly anticipated seasonal food of Gujarat and Maharashtra — made only when the finest Alphonso mangoes arrive.
Ingredients
6 to 8 ripe Alphonso mangoes (also called Hapus — or use any very ripe sweet mango)
2 to 3 tbsp sugar (only if needed — perfectly ripe Alphonso needs very little sugar)
1/4 tsp cardamom powder
a few saffron strands soaked in 2 tbsp warm milk
a pinch of nutmeg (optional)
milk — 2 to 4 tbsp if needed to adjust consistency
4 to 6 puris (hot fried puffed bread) for serving alongside
Method
Choose the right mangoes: Alphonso (Hapus) mango is the correct variety — available from March to June. The mango must be fully ripe — it should yield to gentle pressure and smell intensely sweet. Semi-ripe mangoes produce a sour, disappointing aamras. Do not use refrigerated mangoes for this — they should be at room temperature.
Bloom the saffron: Soak a few saffron strands in 2 tbsp warm milk for 10 minutes. Stir once. The milk turns golden-orange.
Extract the mango pulp — squeeze method: Gently but firmly massage and squeeze each whole mango in your hands (over a large bowl) until the flesh is completely soft and pulpy inside. Then cut a small hole at the tip of each mango and squeeze all the pulp out into the bowl. Cut the remaining mango, remove the seed and scrape all remaining pulp from the skin. This squeeze method is the traditional way — no blender needed and no wateriness from over-processing.
Alternative — peel and blend method: Peel the mangoes. Cut the flesh off the seed. Place in a mixer and blend for 30 seconds until smooth.
Remove any fibres: If the mango pulp has fibrous strings, push through a medium-holed strainer to remove them. Good Alphonso should have no fibres.
Add saffron and cardamom: Add the saffron milk (with strands), cardamom powder and a pinch of nutmeg to the mango pulp. Stir gently.
Taste and add sugar if needed: Taste the aamras. A perfectly ripe Alphonso may need no sugar at all. If needed, add 1 tbsp at a time and stir to dissolve.
Adjust consistency: Aamras should be smooth and flow but not be runny like juice. If too thick, add 2 tbsp cold milk and stir. If too thin, the mangoes may have been too watery — refrigerate 30 minutes to thicken slightly.
Chill: Refrigerate for at least 30 minutes. Aamras is always served cold.
Serve alongside hot puris: Pour the chilled aamras into small steel cups or bowls. Serve alongside hot freshly fried puris. The combination of hot puffed puri and cold sweet aamras is the definitive seasonal Gujarati and Maharashtrian pleasure.
Note: Aamras Puri is the most anticipated seasonal meal of Gujarat and Maharashtra. The arrival of Alphonso mangoes (from the Ratnagiri and Devgad regions of Maharashtra's Konkan coast) each March-May is treated as a cultural event. Gujarati and Maharashtrian families plan aamras meals as community occasions. Using any mango other than Alphonso is considered a compromise — the genuine experience requires Hapus only.