Goan Garcinia indica
The coastal Goan form of Garcinia indica, sun-dried on palm-leaf mats in June after the first rains. Deep purple-black rind with high hydroxycitric acid, used whole in solkadhi, fish curry and the Goan buttermilk drink.
tangy · deep-red-fruit · fruity
10–30%
hydroxycitric acid
of dry rind (HCA)
500 y
of Konkan kitchen use
Goa, Maharashtra, Karnataka coast
6 m
sun-drying cycle
fresh fruit to black rind
18 m
shelf life
sealed jar at ambient
Kokum is the dried rind of Garcinia indica, a slender dioecious tree of the mangosteen family endemic to the Western Ghats and the Konkan littoral from southern Maharashtra through Goa into coastal Karnataka. The fresh fruit is a plum-sized purple-red berry with sticky yellow pulp, but it is the outer skin — peeled, salted and sun-cured for four to five days until it turns leathery and purple-black — that powers the pantry. The dominant acid is (-)-hydroxycitric acid, or HCA, an isomer of citric acid that makes up fifteen to thirty percent of the dry rind and has a rounder, less biting sourness than tamarind or lime; anthocyanins give the steeping water its distinctive rose-to-garnet hue, and garcinol contributes a faint resinous bitterness. Hydroxycitric acid is the same compound extracted industrially for weight-loss supplements, a trade that has reshaped pricing on the Konkan since the early 2000s. Culinarily, kokum defines Maharashtrian and Goan Hindu and Saraswat kitchens. Sol kadhi — a pale pink digestive drink of kokum infusion, coconut milk, green chilli and garlic — closes almost every Konkan meal. Goan fish curry (xitt kodi) leans on kokum rather than tamarind for its sourness. Amti, a Maharashtrian toor dal, uses four or five pieces per pot. Dried kokum is also pressed for kokum butter, a pale cosmetic and confectionery fat solid at room temperature.
Tasting notes
tangy · deep-red-fruit · fruity
Soft, rounded fruit-sourness with a cranberry-and-dried-plum top note, a cool astringency mid-palate, and a faintly resinous mineral finish — noticeably less sharp than tamarind, less perfumed than lime, closer in mouthfeel to sumac dissolved in water.
Flavor compass
Konkan coast and Western Ghats (Maharashtra, Goa, Karnataka), India.
The coastal Goan form of Garcinia indica, sun-dried on palm-leaf mats in June after the first rains. Deep purple-black rind with high hydroxycitric acid, used whole in solkadhi, fish curry and the Goan buttermilk drink.
The Sindhudurg and Ratnagiri Konkan form, slightly larger fruit with thinner rind. Used dried or as the sweet-salty amrut kokum syrup served chilled across Maharashtra in summer.
The coastal Karnataka form, traded under the amsul name. Smaller, more astringent fruit dried with salt to preserve colour, used in Udupi and Mangalorean fish preparations.
Garcinia indica trees bloom on the Konkan hillsides; small whitish flowers set under evergreen canopy.
Round fruits turn from green to cherry-red to deep purple; pulp is sour-sweet, rind carries the hydroxycitric acid.
Fruits hand-picked just before the monsoon breaks. Pulp is separated; rinds go straight to the sun.
Rinds are repeatedly soaked in their own juice and laid out in coastal sun until blackened and leathery — the characteristic kokum.
Dried rinds keep 18 months; also pressed into kokum agal syrup and sol kadhi bases.
Soak 4–6 rinds in warm water 10 minutes before throwing into fish curry or amti; never boil the rind directly.
The molecules that make it taste like Kampot — and not like anything else.
HPLC of Garcinia indica rind: (-)-hydroxycitric acid dominates at 10–30% dry weight, accompanied by citric and malic acids and anthocyanins (cyanidin-3-glucoside) that give the purple-black hue.
22%
Hydroxycitric acid
of dry rind
2.8%
Citric acid
of dry rind
1.5%
Malic acid
of dry rind
2.4%
Anthocyanins
cyanidin-3-glucoside
Tart, tangy, slightly fruity — studied for appetite-regulation claims.
Clean bright sour — the familiar citrus edge.
Green-apple tart — softens the HCA edge.
Non-aromatic pigment; drives the pink sol-kadhi colour.
Mildly bitter polyisoprenylated benzophenone; antioxidant interest.
Trace — preserves the fresh fruit edge.
| Pepper | HCA | Oil |
|---|---|---|
★ Goa (Konkan coast) Classic sun-dried reference | 92% | 22% |
Maharashtra (Ratnagiri) Slightly higher HCA, drier climate | 90% | 24% |
Karnataka (Uttara Kannada) Rounder, softer fruit note | 88% | 20% |
Tamarind (for comparison) Tartaric-led, different sour | 60% | 8% |
Amchur (for comparison) Citric-led powder, sharper edge | 55% | 15% |
Goa, Sattari and Canacona talukas · est. 2007
“Goa's conservation-and-commerce foundation for Garcinia indica, joining 380 smallholder families across the Konkan coast and licensing the aamsul and syrup lines sold across India and the diaspora.”
MethodsAgroforestry under native Konkan canopy, hand-picked ripe fruit in April-June, halved and sun-dried on bamboo mats for 7-10 days (no sulphur), brine-and-sugar syrup cooked in small copper pans. Oil-pressing from seed done cold for cosmetic lots. All lots NABL-tested for aflatoxin and microbial load.
How the world cooks with it.
3 signature dishes
Kokum is Goan DNA. Every Konkani home has a jar of dried rinds; every sit-down meal closes with a cup of pink sol kadhi.
Coconut milk infused with kokum and green chilli — digestive, pink, served cold.
Kingfish or mackerel in coconut-chilli gravy soured with kokum rinds.
Sol kadhi poured over steamed rice as a light lunch.
What it's called, from Phnom Penh to Palermo.
كوكوم
kukum
印度藤黄
yindu tenghuang
Kokum
Kokum
Kokum
कोकम
kokam
Kokum
コクム
kokumu
Kokum
Kokum
Protein
Drink
Deeply sour-fruity, tangy, with a faint almost-smoked sweetness behind the acidity. It sits between tamarind and cranberry, with a cleaner finish than either. The purple-black rind stains food pink as it rehydrates.
Sources