Alampur Baneshan

Unripe Alampur Benishan mango
Alampur Benishan mangoes. This cultivar stays green even on ripening - the yellowing one on the right is probably slightly over-ripe. Note the small white pores distributed all over the skin of both mangoes, which is a characteristic of this cultivar.
Cut Alampur Benishan mango. This strain shows a golden-yellow interior, common in the southern Indian strains.

Alampur Benishan, often incorrectly spelt as Baneshan, is a mango cultivar that originates from India.[1] The mango is a medium-sized fruit, with its appearances ranging from green to yellow, thin skin and fiberless.[2] The flesh of the ripe fruit ranges in colour from yellow to golden-yellow to orange-yellow. Most Indian strains stay green even on ripening, though a slight yellowing or blush is often noted near the stalk. The pores in the skin have a distinct whitish coloration. It differs from, but is related ancestrally to, the high-volume commercial cultivar Banganapalli. There is no distinct bouquet from the ripe fruit, but the flesh has a deep, slightly tart flavour with slight accents of cinnamon, pepper, jackfruit and other Indian mango cultivars like Alphonso. However, this is a much older and prized cultivar and sometimes goes by the name Seeri in Southern India.

References

  1. Ray, P.K. (2002). Breeding Tropical and Subtropical Fruits. Springer. p. 19. ISBN 978-3540428558. Retrieved 3 October 2014.
  2. Agricultural Research Center-West (U.S.). Northeastern Region; Agricultural Research Center (Beltsville, Md.); United States. Agricultural Research Service. Horticultural Crops Research Branch (1897). Plant inventory; plant material introduced. Washington, D.C.: United States Department of Agriculture. Retrieved 3 October 2014.

See also


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