Where mango is added matters
Many producers add fruit after baking to protect color and aroma and to reduce scorch. If you bake fruit with granola, you need a format that tolerates heat and doesn’t harden.
Applications • Use cases
How to choose diced mango that stays tender, mixes cleanly, and holds up through baking or cluster formation—plus what to request in a wholesale spec.
Quick takeaway: “Diced mango” is not a single product. Granola performance depends on cut size consistency, moisture & water activity, infused vs. non-infused, and whether you need low-tack fruit that won’t clump or smear in the mixer.
Mango is naturally high in sugars and aromatic compounds—great for flavor, but those sugars can make fruit sticky and susceptible to clumping, especially in warm production rooms and high-RH storage. In granola, you’re balancing three goals:
Many producers add fruit after baking to protect color and aroma and to reduce scorch. If you bake fruit with granola, you need a format that tolerates heat and doesn’t harden.
Fruit can soften adjacent clusters or, in other systems, draw moisture and become tough. Matching fruit Aw to the finished system is the fastest way to improve consistency.
Large variance in dice size causes “sifting” during conveying, packaging, and shipping. A tight screen spec helps your finished bag look consistent.
For granola, the most important requirements are flowability, stickiness control, and lot-to-lot consistency. Here’s what to lock down in your RFQ/spec.
Mango’s sugars can become sticky at warm temperatures. Low-tack grades (via process controls and/or acceptable anti-stick carriers) can reduce line stoppages, fruit buildup, and inconsistent distribution.
If fruit Aw is much higher than the granola system, granola can soften near the fruit. If fruit Aw is too low, fruit can harden over time. Matching Aw reduces texture drift.
Oversized dice tend to “float” to the top in packaging and shipping; fines can settle, dust, and smear. A defined screen spec keeps your bag consistent.
Even if your label says “diced mango,” the supply chain offers several options: different dice sizes, soft-bite versions, and pieces designed for better flow in dry blends. Choose based on your equipment and how you add fruit.
The most common inclusion format. Works well when added post-bake and mixed gently into cooled granola clusters. Best practice is to specify cut size and limit fines to reduce stickiness and smear.
Designed to reduce sticking and clumping during blending and packaging. Useful for high-speed lines, warm production rooms, and products with long runs.
Creates a premium “fruit-forward” look, but can segregate in shipping and may be harder to distribute evenly in smaller bags.
Useful for “mango speckle” without large fruit pieces. Can improve distribution and reduce segregation, but needs humidity protection.
Adds mango notes without chew. Used in seasoning blends, yogurt coatings, and bar matrices. Specify mesh and whether it’s freeze-dried vs. dried fruit powder.
If you’re making pressed bars or soft-baked cereal bars, fruit preparations can build flavor and sweetness. Specify strength (Brix), acidity, and allowed carriers.
Often provides a more consistent tender-chewy texture and a sweeter flavor profile. Can be easier to standardize across lots. Ingredient statements may include sugar and sometimes oil/carriers.
Can be more fruit-forward and less sweet, but may be firmer and more variable depending on drying parameters and fruit maturity.
Granola isn’t one process: some products are baked, some are cluster-formed and dried, and some are blended post-bake. Use the recommendations below as starting points.
Mango can dominate quickly. Granola brands often pick a “mango note” vs “mango-forward” positioning and set inclusion accordingly. Your best inclusion level depends on cut size (bigger pieces taste stronger), sweetness, and how much other fruit is present.
Lower inclusion for balanced fruit mix. Prioritize uniform distribution, smaller dice, and low fines.
Higher inclusion for visible fruit and aroma. Prioritize low-tack, consistent cut, and tender chew over shelf life.
When blended with pineapple/coconut/banana chips, match Aw across inclusions to avoid uneven softening and clumping.
Mango performs best in a gentle tumble mixer after the granola has cooled. Warm clusters increase tack and encourage fruit buildup.
Humidity is one of the biggest drivers of clumping and stickiness in dried mango. If you see variability by season, environmental control and packaging are usually the first levers.
Baking mango can drive off aroma, darken color, and harden texture. If you must bake it in, choose smaller cuts and adjust bake steps.
Inclusions often determine how a granola ages. Mango that’s too wet can soften clusters; mango that’s too dry can harden and feel sharp. Matching Aw and using moisture-barrier packaging improves stability.
Drop this into your procurement email. If you share your process (post-bake blend vs baked-in), we can help tighten the targets.
PRODUCT: Diced Mango for Granola (Wholesale) FORMAT: - Cut size: ____ mm (target range ____ to ____) - Screen spec: Overs (____%) / Unders-fines (____% max) - Style: Standard / Low-tack (mixer-friendly) / Soft-bite COMPOSITION / LABEL: - Infused: Yes / No - Ingredient statement required: __________________________ - Allowed carriers/coatings: (e.g., sunflower oil, rice flour) ____________________ - Restricted ingredients: (e.g., no added oil / no preservatives / no added sugar) ____________________ PHYSICAL: - Moisture (%): target ____ (range ____ to ____) - Water activity (Aw): target ____ (max ____) - Color expectations: ____________________ - Sensory: sweet/tart, aroma notes, chew/tenderness ____________________ FOOD SAFETY / MICRO: - COA required per lot: Yes / No - Target limits: TPC ____; Yeast/Mold ____; Coliforms ____ (as applicable) - Foreign material controls: metal detection / magnets / sieving (specify) - Allergen statement required: Yes / No - Country of origin documentation required: Yes / No CERTIFICATIONS (if required): - Organic: Yes / No - Kosher: Yes / No - Non-GMO: Yes / No - Gluten-free statement: Yes / No PACKAGING / LOGISTICS: - Case pack: ____ lb bags x ____ per case OR tote (specify) - Bag type/liner: ____________________ - Pallet configuration: ____________________ - Shelf life: ____ months - Storage: cool, dry; recommended RH/temperature ____________ - Ship-to region: ____________________ - Estimated monthly volume: ____________________ - Intended process: Post-bake blend / Baked-in / Bars / Other ____________________
Include your cut size, whether you need organic, your monthly volume, and the ship-to region. If you’re unsure which dice is best, tell us how you add fruit (post-bake vs baked-in) and what issue you’re trying to solve (clumping, hardening, segregation).
Share your target texture and line constraints, and we’ll propose an ingredient spec (format + moisture/Aw targets + packaging) you can use for procurement.
We can align documentation to your QA program: spec sheets, COAs, allergen statements, and certifications when applicable.