Thai cultivar that can bear in and out of season — sometimes called the 'miracle mango' for its near-year-round availability under controlled-flowering programmes. Widely grown across Southeast Asia for off-season export.
Thai given-name 'Chok Anan' (โชค-อนันต์ = 'endless fortune / luck' — *chok* = luck/fortune, *anan* = endless / eternal) — the cultivar is widely nicknamed the 'miracle mango' for its ability to fruit year-round.
Chok Anan (ช็อกอนันต์) is the Thai cultivar that nearly broke the seasonality of mangoes. Its Thai name unpacks as chok (luck, fortune) + anan (endless, eternal) — together approximately "endless fortune" — and the cultivar's nickname across the Southeast Asian growing trade is the miracle mango. The miracle refers to Chok Anan's unusual willingness to bear fruit multiple times per year when treated with paclobutrazol or careful pruning regimes; an orchard can be coaxed into two or even three crops in a single calendar year, producing fruit somewhere on the Thai globe in any month.
The cultivar was selected in the 1990s in central Thailand, though its exact lineage is undocumented in the academic literature. From Thailand it spread quickly to Cambodia, Malaysia, the Philippines, Indonesia, Vietnam, and most importantly to the open fields of north Australia (where it now anchors the country's modest off-season export trade) and to a handful of producers in Florida and Hawaii. The unique characteristic that made the cultivar travel — the ability to be flushed into flowering on demand — turned out to be commercially valuable far beyond Thai borders.
Visually Chok Anan is a mid-sized elongated mango (300–500 g), with a thin yellow-green skin that ripens to a clean yellow-gold and a small, neat beak. The flesh is pale yellow rather than saffron, fibre-free, with a small flat seed and an unusually high flesh-to-stone ratio. Brix sits in the comfortable 16–20° range — not as concentrated as Nam Dok Mai Si Thong but more reliable across seasons. The flavour is the variety's quiet virtue: cleanly sweet, mildly juicy, light on the aroma. No one calls Chok Anan a flagship dessert mango, but no one finds it disappointing either.
Commercially the variety occupies a specific role: the off-season filler. When Nam Dok Mai is out of peak (July–February), Thai exporters often substitute or supplement with Chok Anan to keep year-round mango supply flowing to Korea, Japan, the Gulf and the EU. Domestic Thai markets sell Chok Anan at lower prices than Nam Dok Mai but higher than the green-eating Khiao Sawoei, putting it in the workhorse table-mango tier of the Thai mango shelf. It is the most reliably-priced mango of the year for a Thai household — not the best, but rarely absent.