Bibha Chowdhuri’s menu
Achar / preserving condiment (keeps for months, served in small touches)

Aamer achar — green mango pickle with panch phoron

PreservingDocumented🍋 🌶️facile30 min + 2 days drying

Thin slices of green mango sun-dried then confit in mustard oil with toasted and ground panch phoron: a sour, spicy, powerful condiment that keeps for months and enlivens a simple plate of rice and dal.

Achar / preserving condiment (keeps for months, served in small touches)

Thin slices of green mango sun-dried then confit in mustard oil with toasted and ground panch phoron: a sour, spicy, powerful condiment that keeps for months and enlivens a simple plate of rice and dal.

In spring, when the mango trees bend under the still-green fruit, not one is wasted. We slice them, salt them, and entrust them to the terrace sun for several days — you must watch for the monsoon, otherwise all is lost! Then mustard oil and the five spices do the rest, and the earthenware jar keeps the summer locked in. Wherever I set down my photographic plates, a little of this achar brought Calcutta back to me.
Bibha Chowdhuri
Ingredients
  • Sour green mangoesseveral, sliced (sour base)
  • Saltgenerously (preservation)
  • Turmerica spoonful (color and antiseptic)
  • Mustard oilto cover (preservation and body)
  • Panch phoron, toasted and groundgenerously (aromatic signature)
  • Dried red chilito taste (heat)
  • Palm sugar (gur)a little (balance)
How it was made : Solar drying and a covering of mustard oil — naturally antimicrobial — allowed the pickle to keep for months without refrigeration. Each family guarded its spice blend, passed from mother to daughter.
Sources : Chitrita Banerji, 'Life and Food in Bengal' (1991) · Bengali domestic preservation traditions (achar)