The Day in Thai Fruit: MaprangWhen encountering a food I’ve never seen before, my first thought is: eat it. Stopping to pick up our breakfast feast at the magnificent food market next to our Bangkok airbnb, I spotted an unrecognizable fruit tucked demurely among the sliced Rose Apple (which I also bought) and the usual pineapple and watermelon. This unidentified fruit looked a little like sliced Manila mango, mostly yellow meat with smears of magenta, but I knew it wasn’t mango (a fruit I adore; I wrote a poem about mango in the 70s, when it was still relatively unknown in the Midwest).
Back at the apartment, I tasted: the texture was slightly woody, with a graininess that was not unpleasant and a slightly honey-like flavor of dates. It was okay, and I strongly suspect that this fruit I bought was not quite ripe (eating young unripe fruit, like papaya and guava, is, as you probably know, common in SE Asia).
Later in the day, biking around Ayutthaya, we stopped at a festival of some sort and there was a lot of food being served (I’d like to see stats on the percentage of the Thai population involved in food production and preparation; I’m guessing it’s high; there are small stands serving food everywhere). A nice little lady was selling some kind of pickle, and I immediately recognized it as a prepared version of the fresh fruit I’d eaten earlier. I liked this green pickled version quite a bit more than the yellow fresh version, and I bought a bag (much more than we could finish in the time we had left in the capitol city, but the lady was really nice and I wanted to see how this fruit fared under further processing).
Pickled, Maprang was much more interesting, the texture somewhat waxy and the pickling solution added a layer of complementary sourness over the just-ever-so-sweet fruit. I asked the nice lady the name of the fruit and I thought she said something like “Mac-dong.” Googling, I determined that the actual name of this mystery mango-looking (and related) fruit is likely Maprang, a name that’s somewhat phonetically similar to Mac-dong (Roman alphabet versions of Thai words are frequently misleading).
Maprang is a fruit I don’t believe I’ve ever seen in the United States and most interesting because unusual (to me). I’m glad I ate it. In the pix, the yellower is fresh, and the greener the pickled. Like many other mildly flavored fruits, a sprinkling of sugar-chili-salt would be a welcome enhancement to fresh Maprang.
"Don't you ever underestimate the power of a female." Bootsy Collins