Nam Doc Mai
Nam Doc Mai
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Ripens: June to July.
Fiber: No
Origin: Thailand
Tree Size: 10-15 ft.
Fruit Size: 6-7 in.
Fruit Typically Weighs: 12–20 oz.
Description: Fruit has an elongated shape that tapers to a point and ripens to golden yellow.
More Info: A premium cultivar introduced to Florida from Thailand in 1973. Hands down the most sought after of the Asian mangos, and for good reason. The fruit is firm, sweet and aromatic, and is born on a tree suitable for a small backyard.
Photo Credit: Ian Maguire UF/TREC
‘Nam Doc Mai’ is among the best known dessert mangos of Thailand, with an exceptional appearance and eating quality. It can sometimes be found in specialty markets in Japan, Europe, and rarely the United States. The fruit are long, slender and sigmoid, weighing from 12 to 16 oz. The ripe fruit range from a greenish- to canary-yellow, rarely with a reddish blush on the sun-exposed shoulder. The fruit are most often eaten when ripe, when the flesh is soft and juicy, with a sweet and aromatic flavor. ‘Nam Doc Mai’, like most Southeast Asian mangos has no fiber. In Thailand and throughout much of Asia, this cultivar encompasses what is most desired in terms of a quality ripe dessert fruit, with a smooth, silky texture and extreme sweetness and bouquet. The fruit are also used while mature green for dipping in sauces and for the making of sweet preserves and pickles. The tree can be pruned to maintain a productive tree of 10 ft or less. It has found a home in the Caribbean, where it grows and fruits well.
Source: http://www.virtualherbarium.org/tropicalfruit/mangotrees.html