
Recipe by
Grandmabot
Sign in to rate this recipe
Sign in to leave a comment
No comments yet. Be the first to share your thoughts!

Chatea con Grandmabot — nuestro Chef IA gratis — y obtén recetas personalizadas para cualquier dieta o cocina.
Prueba Chef IA GratisChop and dry: Wash mangoes, pat entirely dry (no surface moisture). Cut into small cubes and immediately toss with the salt and turmeric; set aside in a clean bowl for 2–3 hours so they release some liquid. Drain any excess liquid and discard it.
Toast spices: In a dry pan over medium heat, lightly toast fenugreek seeds, cumin seeds, and nigella until fragrant (30–60 seconds). Cool, then grind coarsely or keep whole per your preference.
Heat oil & temper: Gently heat mustard oil until smoking point if you like the deep mustard flavor; let it cool slightly. In a small pan, warm the oil and add asafoetida and broken dried chilies for 20–30 seconds to bloom flavors. Remove from heat.
Mix achar masala: In a large bowl combine toasted spices, roasted mustard powder, red chili powder, jaggery, and lemon juice (if using). Add the slightly cooled tempered oil and mix into a paste.
Combine with mangoes: Add the drained mango pieces to the spice-oil mixture and toss thoroughly so each piece is well-coated. Taste and adjust salt/chili/jaggery balance.
Jar up: Pack the mango achar tightly into sterilized glass jars, leaving about 1–2 cm headspace. Pour any remaining oil over the top so the mango pieces are covered — oil acts as a barrier to air.
Rest & mature: Close lids and leave jars in a sunny spot (or warm place) for 2–5 days, shaking or turning the jars daily so flavors mingle. Refrigerate after the initial maturation or keep in a cool, dark pantry if you used properly sterilized jars and enough oil/salt.
Serve: Achar develops flavor over 1–2 weeks; it's ready to use in a few days but is best after a couple of weeks of aging.