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Proxima Traders – The leading Mangoes and Cashews sellers
Proxima Traders – The leading Mangoes and Cashews sellers
Our mango and cashew are grown in a premium orchard in the ratnagiri region of India. They are grown using organic methods and is not subjected to any artificial fertilizers or chemicals. Nutritious organic fertilizers are used which results in a tasty and nutritious fruit when ripe. Additionally, there is no hybridization of the seed, which ensures the original fruit flavour.
Ratnagiri Alphonso Mangoes are the succulent, aromatic fruits of an evergreen tree Mangifera-indica.
Botanically, Alphonso mango is a drupe, consisting of an outer skin, a fleshy edible portion, and a central stone enclosing a single seed.
A Ripe Alphonso mango sweetness is known to be 18 degree Brix and 0.45% acidity
The mango is thought to have originated over 5,000 years ago in the Hindo-Berma region, which extends from eastern India and southern China across Southeast Asia. Mango seeds traveled from Asia to the Middle East, East Africa and South America beginning around 300 or 400 A.D. The cultivation of mango began slowly moving westward with the spice trade. The Portuguese, who landed in Calcutta in 1498, were the first to establish a mango trade.
Spanish explorers brought mangos to South America and Mexico in the 1600’s. Mango is a staple in the cuisines in all of the tropical and subtropical countries where it’s grown, from Southeast Asia to South America. There are over 1,000 different mango varieties grown throughout the world.
The first attempt to introduce the mango into the U.S. came in 1833 to Florida. The mango has had a tumultuous history in Florida, due primarily to weather, minimizing the commercial production of the fruit in the early 1990’s.
A very small percentage of fresh mangos available commercially in the U.S. are grown in south Florida and southern California.
When to harvest is one of the most important decisions a grower faces when it comes to providing the marketplace with superior quality fruit.
We used the following parameters to determine if the fruit is mature and ready to harvest: fruit shape, peel color and texture, flesh firmness, flesh color, and soluble solids. Varietal differences, growing regions, climatic conditions and growing practices also influence when the fruit is ready to harvest.
Mangos are transported to packinghouses as soon as possible and washing, brushing, hot-water treatment is done to disinfect mango from fruit flies and the utmost care is taken to keep them in the shade to protect the quality of the fruit.