Frozen Mango — Cups to Grams
1 cup frozen diced mango = 165 grams | thawed = 158g | pureed = 240g | 16 oz bag = 2.75 cups
1 cup Frozen Mango = 165 grams
Quick Conversion Table — Frozen Mango
| Cups | Grams | Tablespoons | Teaspoons |
|---|---|---|---|
| ¼ | 41.3 g | 4.01 tbsp | 12.1 tsp |
| ⅓ | 55 g | 5.34 tbsp | 16.2 tsp |
| ½ | 82.5 g | 8.01 tbsp | 24.3 tsp |
| ⅔ | 110 g | 10.7 tbsp | 32.4 tsp |
| ¾ | 123.8 g | 12 tbsp | 36.4 tsp |
| 1 | 165 g | 16 tbsp | 48.5 tsp |
| 1½ | 247.5 g | 24 tbsp | 72.8 tsp |
| 2 | 330 g | 32 tbsp | 97.1 tsp |
| 3 | 495 g | 48.1 tbsp | 145.6 tsp |
| 4 | 660 g | 64.1 tbsp | 194.1 tsp |
Frozen Mango Weight by Form
Frozen mango weighs almost identically to fresh diced mango — a notable difference from smaller fruits like blueberries, where ice glazing adds measurable weight. Mango pieces are large enough that surface ice is proportionally insignificant. The major weight variation between forms comes from piece size and processing method.
Frozen diced (165g/cup): The standard commercial form — approximately 1.5-2cm cubes, individually quick-frozen (IQF) so pieces remain separate. This is what most recipes mean when they call for "frozen mango." The 16 oz (454g) standard retail bag yields exactly 2.75 cups.
Thawed (158g/cup): After 30-60 minutes at room temperature or overnight in the refrigerator, frozen diced mango releases approximately 5-10% of its weight as juice. If the recipe requires precise weight, drain the juice and measure the solids. For smoothies and most cooking applications, use the thawed mango and juice together.
Frozen chunks — larger (155g/cup): Larger pieces (3-4cm) create bigger air gaps when measured by volume, reducing weight per cup slightly. Common in 32 oz bulk bags sold at warehouse clubs. Same nutritional profile, slightly different texture when thawed — larger pieces hold shape better for fruit salads.
Pureed from frozen (240g/cup): When frozen mango is blended to a smooth puree, all air is eliminated. A food processor or high-powered blender produces a dense, thick puree at 240g per cup — 45% heavier than frozen diced measured by cup. Always measure puree by weight in recipes for consistency.
| Measure | Frozen diced (g) | Thawed (g) | Pureed (g) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 tbsp | 10.3g | 9.9g | 15g |
| ¼ cup | 41g | 40g | 60g |
| ½ cup | 83g | 79g | 120g |
| 1 cup | 165g | 158g | 240g |
| 16 oz bag | ~2.75 cups | ~2.9 cups | — |
| 32 oz bag | ~5.5 cups | ~5.7 cups | — |
The No-Thaw Smoothie Method
Frozen mango added directly to a blender without thawing is one of the most useful techniques in quick healthy cooking. The frozen pieces simultaneously chill the drink and provide all the thickening that ice cubes would offer — without diluting the flavor the way ice dilutes.
Basic mango smoothie (1 large serving, approximately 400ml): 1 cup (165g) frozen diced mango + 1/2 cup (120ml) coconut water or orange juice + 1/2 ripe banana (approximately 60g, fresh or frozen). Blend on high 45-60 seconds until completely smooth. The result is thick, cold, and intensely flavored — closer to a mango lassi in body than a thin juice blend.
Mango-ginger variation: Same base + 1 teaspoon (5g) freshly grated ginger + 1 tablespoon (15ml) lime juice. Ginger and mango share a terpene chemistry that makes them mutually enhancing — together they taste more intensely flavored than either alone.
Mango lassi (serves 2): 2 cups (330g) frozen diced mango + 1 cup (240g) full-fat yogurt + 1/2 cup (120ml) whole milk + 2 tablespoons (30ml) honey + 1/4 teaspoon cardamom + pinch salt. Blend until completely smooth. Yield: approximately 700ml. Serve immediately — it separates within 15 minutes. The full-fat yogurt is not optional for a proper lassi; low-fat produces a thin, less-satisfying texture.
Why no thaw: Thawing before blending allows cell walls broken during freezing to release intracellular juice, which can make the smoothie watery and reduce the thick, creamy texture that frozen fruit provides. The blender does the work of breaking down frozen pieces in under 60 seconds with a powerful motor.
Three-Cup Mango Sorbet: The Full Recipe
The food-processor mango sorbet is a reliable, no-equipment recipe that produces professional-quality results in under 5 minutes of active work.
Full recipe (yields approximately 3 cups / 700g sorbet):
- 1 lb (454g) frozen diced mango — approximately 2.75 cups, straight from the freezer
- 1/4 cup (85g) honey, agave, or maple syrup
- 1 tablespoon (15ml) fresh lime juice
- Pinch of salt
Method: Add all ingredients to a food processor fitted with the blade attachment. Process in 10-second pulses, scraping down sides between pulses, until the mixture goes from crumbly to creamy — approximately 4-6 pulses total (about 90 seconds of processing). The transformation happens suddenly: the mixture looks like frozen crumbles, then within one additional pulse becomes smooth and creamy. Stop immediately when creamy — overprocessing warms the mixture and causes it to liquify.
Serve immediately for soft-serve consistency (approximately 3 cups / 700g), or transfer to a freezer-safe container and freeze 2-3 hours for scoopable sorbet. Scoopable sorbet keeps frozen for up to 1 month; quality is best in the first 2 weeks.
The lime juice rationale: Mango contains malic acid and citric acid (approximately 0.13-0.2% combined). The added lime juice (citric acid) amplifies these natural fruit acids through a phenomenon called "flavor potentiation" — the perceived mango flavor is measurably more intense with a small acid addition than without it. This is why a sorbet without any citrus often tastes flat, even when made from excellent fruit.
Champagne Mango vs Tommy Atkins: Variety Comparison
Most commercial frozen mango is Tommy Atkins or similar high-yield, firm-fleshed varieties. Understanding what you are buying matters for applications where flavor intensity is critical.
| Variety | Shape/color | Sugar content | Fiber | Best use frozen |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tommy Atkins | Large, oval, red blush | 12-15% | High | General purpose, chutney |
| Champagne (Ataulfo) | Small, kidney, golden | 17-20% | Very low | Sorbet, smoothies, puree |
| Keitt | Large, green even ripe | 14-16% | Low | Cubed desserts, salsas |
| Kent | Large, yellow-red | 15-17% | Low | Sorbet, purees |
The 5-7% sugar difference between Tommy Atkins and Champagne mango is substantial in frozen applications. At equal weight (165g per cup), Champagne mango delivers approximately 8-12g more natural sugar per cup — noticeable sweetness that often means less added sweetener is needed in sorbet and smoothie recipes.
Fiber content matters for texture: Tommy Atkins' higher fiber produces a slightly stringier texture even when blended, while Champagne mango's near-fiber-free flesh blends to a completely smooth, almost custardy consistency. For mango sorbet where silky texture is the goal, Ataulfo/Champagne variety is the professional's choice.
- USDA FoodData Central — Mango, raw (FDC ID 169910)
- National Mango Board — Variety descriptions and sugar content data
- Journal of Food Composition and Analysis — Volatile compounds in Mangifera indica varieties, 2021
- Food Science & Technology — Effect of freezing on mango (Mangifera indica) texture and flavor compounds