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| 1/2 | cup | tamarind pulp | packed, (or fresh lime juice) |
| 2 1/2 | cups | water | |
| 3 | pounds | mangos | |
| 1 | cup | onions | 1/4 inch dice |
| 1 | cup | golden raisins | |
| 1 | cup | currants | dried |
| 4 | tablespoons | ginger | fresh, minced |
| 3 | large | garlic cloves | finely minced |
| 1 | x | lemon zest | |
| 2 | cups | brown sugar | light, packed |
| 3/4 | cup | sugar | |
| 2 | tablespoons | mustard seed | |
| 1 | tablespoon | salt | |
| 2 | teaspoons | red pepper flakes | dried, crushed |
| 2 | teaspoons | cinnamon | ground |
| 1/2 | teaspoon | turmeric | |
| 1/4 | teaspoon | cloves | ground |
| 1/4 | teaspoon | cayenne pepper | |
| 1 1/2 | cups | white vinegar | distilled |
Crumble tamarind into a small bowl and stir in 1 1/2 cups of the water; let tamarind soak for at least an hour, meanwhile preparing the remaining ingredients.
Or substitute the fresh lime juice plus 1/2 cup of water at this point.
Peel and dice the mangoes, cutting them into small pieces for a jam-like chutney, into 1/2 inch or larger dice for a chunky mixture.
Place the pieces in a preserving pan.
Add the onions, raisins, currants, ginger, garlic, lemon zest, brown and granulated sugars, mustard seed, salt, crushed hot red pepper, cinnamon, turmeric, cloves, ground red pepper, white vinegar and the remaining 1 cup water; stir the mixture and let it rest until the tamarind "juice" is ready, or for up to several hours, if that is convenient.
When the tamarind pulp is very soft, strain the liquid through a sieve, pressing it to remove all possible liquid and any pulp that will pass through.
Discard the pulp remaining in the sieve.
Add the liquid to the chutney mixture.
Set the pan over medium heat and bring the ingredients to a boil.
Lower the heat so the mixture simmers and cook it, uncovered, stirring often, until the mango and onion pieces are translucent and the chutney has thickened to the consistency of preserves, 1 to 2 hours depending on the firmness of the fruit. (The chutney will thicken further in the jar, so don't reduce it too much.)
If the chutney threatens to stick before the mango pieces are translucent, add a little water.
Remove chutney from the heat, cool a sample, and taste it for tartness, sweetness, and degree of hotness. (The overall flavor is elusive at this point, but these factors can be judged.)
If you wish, add a little more vinegar, sugar or ground hot red pepper.
Reheat the chutney to boiling and ladle it into hot, clean pint or half-pint canning jars, leaving 1/4 inch of headspace. Seal the jars; process for 15 minutes (for either size jar) in a boiling-water bath.
Cool, label, and store the jars for a least a month so that its many flavors can blend and balance.
This will keep for at least a year in a cool pantry.
Yield: 6 to 7 cups.
| % Daily Value* | |
| Total Fat 3.0g | 5% |
| Saturated Fat 0.0g | 2% |
| Trans Fat 0.0g | |
| Cholesterol 0mg | 0% |
| Sodium 1766mg | 74% |
| Total Carbohydrate 136.0g | 45% |
| Dietary Fiber 10.0g | 40% |
| Sugars 112.0g | |
| Protein 5.0g | 11% |
| Vitamin A | 58% | Vitamin C | 250% | |
| Calcium | 13% | Iron | 15% |
* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2,000 calorie diet. Your daily values may be higher or lower depending on your calorie needs.
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Once a year when I was a boy, my parents and I would visit my paternal grandparents at their farm in Virginia. Tucked away in the Blue Ridge Mountains in...
I just tried this recipe, used more garlic, and used chicken breast instead of chicken thighs, so great, I can't wait giving it a five stars. Excellent.
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