Tuesday, February 8, 2011

Tasty Nana

ALOHA!
Welcome to Ba-Nana-Rama!



Listen!




Young Bananas as landscaping.
It is believed by many experts that bananas
 were the first fruit cultivated by humans.


"Time flies like an arrow;
 fruit flies like a banana”
 Groucho Marx 



In 1870 a fishing boat captain named Lorenzo Dow Baker
imported the first 160 bunches of bananas into the US.
They were Gros Michels from Jamaica.
By 1910, American's enjoyed 40 million bunches per year.




Here we see the young, whole leaves (like in the shot at top), 
and how the wind "fringes" then
 as in the older plant at the top of this shot.




Alexander the Great
 introduced bananas to the west in 327 B.C.E.
They originated in India, China & Southeast Asia.

The banana "tree" is not really a tree, but a giant variety 

of grasses, and the world's largest herb.

 The banana is the fruit of this herb.




What other food offers you it's hand in friendship?
The flower (shown) is the source of herbal medicine.




In the late 1920s a disease began wiping out
 the Gros Michel plantations.
So in the 1940s the industry switched
 to the Cavendish variety.
This variety had been collected by Cavendish
 in a private garden in Southern China
during the previous century.
  A successor plant 
in the greenhouse of England's
Duke of Devonshire is the progenitor of all of today's commercial crop.
Too bad the Cavendish bruises easier than the
Gros Michel did (no throwing them in the hold of ships. Now packaging is needed).  
And to anyone who knew the Gros Michel
today's Cavendish lacks taste and texture.







 The "trunk" is really a bark-less 
"pseudostem"
made only of the leaves waiting to unfold,
as you can see here. .








"You don't want
 your credibility banana to turn brown. . . " 

Bradley Whitford 







Don't break the bananas!

The cluster of bananas sold in supermarkets
 is a "hand" of bananas,
 while the individual bananas on the hand are called fingers.

"Never interrupt me when I'm eating a banana."

Ryan Stiles






The song "Yes, We Have No Bananas" was released in 1923
 and became a huge hit. It refers to the banana shortage at the time.
("Fruit Blight Costs Millions. . . No Remedy is Available"
New York Times, 1927)


In 2001, Britain recorded 300 incidents of injuries related to bananas.
 The majority of these involved people slipping on banana peels.




Hawaii "Apple Bananas that grow in our yards & farms.



"I'd go a long way for a good banana."
Whoopie Goldberg





Bananas were popularized in the United States at the 1876 Philadelphia Centennial Celebration, where they were sold wrapped in foil for 10 cents each.
Worldwide, bananas are the fourth largest fruit crop.
The average American consumes 28 pounds of bananas per year.
The banana peel is edible, though perhaps not very palatable unless cooked.
About 50 percent of people who are allergic to latex are often also allergic to bananas.
India is the #1 banana producer in the world.




How do YOU eat a banana?
Most peel from the stem end.
Monkeys hold the stem,
pinch the black tip
and peel it down.
Each bite is sweeter,
approaching the stem-end
(where we usually start).


I think the monkeys have something on us!


           Go Bananas!  cloudia

29 comments:

Jannie Funster said...

Banana, banana, I do love thee so.
I do miss the Gros Michels, you know.

Whoopi would travel many a mile and street.
To land upon such a fine tasty treat.

Just a little ode to this large-grassed herb.
Now I'm going to sit on the curb.

xoxo

Cloudia said...

You tasted one?! How OLD ARE You?!

LOL

Thanx for visiting, J

Jeannie said...

Great info! I hope to have a banana plant some day...

Donna said...

So interesting!!! LOVE bananas and the history was fascinating!!!

Hilary said...

Bananas! They have such a-peel. ;)

Anonymous said...

Must be 15 years or so since last I saw them grow. As there can't ever be something like 'dark yellow', surely a bright light in our lifes.

Please have a wonderful Wednesday.

daily athens

Cloudia said...

A-Peel!


Ouch :-)

黄清华 Wong Ching Wah said...

Don't we all have love some bananas every other day ! There are many varieties in our country. Thanks for sharing those in Hawaii...

wenn said...

my favorite!

Full-On-Forward said...

Beautiful--There was a Nutrition thingy put out on the incredible benefits of Bananananas..(I never know when to quit typing that word..)

Great Post--they had Slipped my mind!

HFSC,

J

I used to have about 8 plants-- I would just chuck em under the house for the winter--and next year! Perfect Fruit!!!

Lori Skoog said...

Loved the banana story. I think I will have to go have one right now.

foongpc said...

All about bananas today? Haha!! I'm gonna eat some bananas! : )

Rajesh said...

Very informative with lovely images.

Windsmoke. said...

Banana tree plantations in Queensland, Australia were wiped out by the floods and Cyclone Yasi now it looks like we'll be paying $15.00 a kilo that's about double the price. As the song title suggests Yes, We Have No Bananas :-(

Teresa said...

Great post!! Bananas are so wonderful.

Reader Wil said...

Very interesting post, Cloudia! I grew up among bananas. We had them in the garden, but my mum didn't want us to play near them, for our clothes got stains that were to stay there forever.
Where does the expression comes from: he goes bananas?

Kay said...

I have half a banana every morning and it's the apple banana. They really do last a lot longer than the Bluefield or is it the Cavendish we have in Hawaii, too?

bichonpawz said...

There is nothing like a really fresh banana!! One of the things I love about Key West...sitting on the beach...eating a fresh banana! Nothing like it!! Especially when we are up to our elbows in snow! It is nice to dream...

the walking man said...

a very versatile fruit almost always savory.

Dinesh chandra said...

hi good banana how r u.

regards
dinesh chandra

Akelamalu said...

I love bananas Mmmmmmm yummy. :)

Dr. Russell Norman Murray said...

'Young Bananas as landscaping.
It is believed by many experts that bananas were the first fruit cultivated by humans.'

Interesting. I also liked seeing those very green ones.:)

இ Baŋäŋaz இ said...

Oh love reading this post feel quite at home haha. Whoa have to eat bananas like the monkeys which I think is a great way just like eating papaya from the tip first. Going bananas now tQ.

Steffi said...

Great and interesting post.Your photos are very beautiful.I love to visiting your blog.

Greetings,Steffi

Couture Carrie said...

Fun post, darling!
Love the Groucho Marx quote!

xoxox,
CC

Marguerite said...

Cool post! We have banana trees here, too. But they don't actually produce fruit. Have a wonderful day, cher!

Cloudia said...

Yes, many varieties in China & India.
We import the Cavendish here in Hawaii but you can also buy (or pick!) apple bananas too.

A shame about Australia!
And where DID "going bananas" come from?

Aloha friend!!!!!

Charles Gramlich said...

Now I'm going to have to look up some stuff about Bananas being the first cultivated fruit.

Full-On-Forward said...

Oh-- I forgot--

naner naner boo boo,
stick your head in doo doo!!

Where did THAT come from??

J