Aam Panna

Aam panna — green mango cooler with roasted cumin, black salt and mint, River Delta

Aam panna is made at the point in the Bengali calendar when the mangoes are still green and hard on the tree and the temperature in the delta has already passed 40°C. The green mangoes are roasted directly in the flame or on hot coals until the skin blackens and the flesh inside becomes soft and smoky, then the pulp is blended with black salt, roasted cumin, and mint. It is served ice cold.

It is drunk cold, sometimes with ice, during the crushing pre-monsoon heat of April and May. In villages it is also given to prevent heatstroke, which it does not do, but it does make the heat feel briefly less fatal.

Zone: River Delta
SOURCE: Translated from a recipe shared by a home cook from Murshidabad district, West Bengal, on a Bengali-language food blog, 2019.
LOCAL NAME: আম পান্না
Servings 4
Prep Time 10 minutes
Cook Time 20 minutes

INGREDIENTS 

METHOD 

  • Roast the green mangoes directly over a gas flame, turning regularly with tongs, until the skin is completely blackened and the flesh inside is soft — approximately 15–20 minutes. Alternatively roast under a hot grill or in a 220°C oven for 25 minutes. The charring of the skin is what gives aam panna its smoky depth.
  • Allow to cool slightly. Peel away and discard the blackened skin. Scoop the soft pulp away from the stone.
  • Blend the mango pulp with black salt, roasted cumin, sugar, mint, chilli powder, and half the water until completely smooth.
  • Add the remaining water and blend briefly. Taste and adjust sweetness, salt, and cumin.
  • Strain through a fine sieve if a smooth drink is preferred, or serve as is for more texture.
  • Serve over ice with a sprig of fresh mint. Aam panna keeps refrigerated for up to 3 days — stir before serving as it settles.
Start Cooking

NOTES

UK adaptation: Green unripe mangoes from South Asian grocers year-round — do not use ripe mangoes, the flavour is entirely different. Black salt from South Asian grocers or online. Roasted cumin powder — dry roast whole cumin seeds in a pan for 2 minutes until fragrant, then grind. Everything else widely available.
US adaptation: Green unripe mangoes from Indian grocery stores, Latin American grocers, or H-Mart. Black salt from Patel Brothers or online. Everything else widely available.
Cook’s note: The roasting stage is non-negotiable — boiling the mango produces a flat, sweet pulp without the smoky depth that defines aam panna. Char the skin completely before peeling.
No ratings yet

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recipe Rating




Scroll to Top