There
are two main varieties of bananas, the fruit or sweet banana
and the plantain. The fruit banana is eaten raw out of hand
when it turns yellow and develops a succulent sweetness
with a soft, smooth, creamy, yet firm pulp. The plantain,
a cooking banana, is also referred to as the meal, vegetable
or horse banana. Plantains have lower water content, making
them drier and starchier than fruit bananas. Though the
banana plant has the appearance of a sort of palm tree,
and is often called a banana palm, it is actually considered
a perennial herb. It dies back after each fruiting and produces
new growth for the next generation of fruit. Bananas do
not grow simply from seed. Man intervened long ago and crossed
two varieties of African wild bananas, the Musa acuminata
and the Musa baalbisiana, got rid of the many seeds that
were an unpleasant presence, and improved the flavor and
texture from hard and unappetizing to its present soft and
irresistibly sweet flavor.
Today bananas must be propagated from large rootstocks
or rhizomes that are carefully transplanted in a suitable
climate, namely the hot tropics, where the average temperature
is a humid 80 degrees Fahrenheit (27 degrees Celsius), and
a minimum of 3 1/2 inches (75 mm) of rainfall a month. The
soil must have excellent drainage or the rootstocks will
rot. The plants grow new shoots, often called suckers, pups,
or ratoons, from the shallow rootstocks or rhizomes, and
continue to produce new plants generation after generation
for several decades. In about nine months the plants reach
their mature height of about 15 to 30 feet. Some varieties
will grow to a height of 40 feet. From the stems, that are
about 12 inches thick, flower shoots begin to produce bananas.
If you have never seen bananas growing, you might be puzzled
that they appear to be growing upside-down with their stems
connected to the bunch at the bottom and the tips pointing
upward.
Bananas possess a unique scientific phenomenon called "negative
geotropism." As the little bananas start to develop,
they grow downward--as gravity would dictate. Little by
little, several "hands" or double rows develop
vertically and form a partial spiral around the stem. As
they take in more and more sunlight, their natural growth
hormones bring about a most puzzling phenomenon, and they
begin to turn and grow upward. As the plant becomes heavier
with maturing fruit, it must be supported with poles. The
stems are made of layers and layers of leaves that are wrapped
around each other. Though quite large and thick, the stems
are not strong and woody like most fruit trees and can break
under the weight of many bunches of bananas.
Though there are approximately 300 species of bananas,
only 20 varieties are commercially cultivated. Local populations
and visitors who experience the regional cuisines when they
travel enjoy the many non-commercial varieties. Members
of the Musaceae family, the banana plant belongs to the
monocotyledons, a group that includes palms, grasses, and
orchids. Bananas are mature about three months from the
time of flowering, with each bunch producing about 15 "hands"
or rows. Each hand has about 20 bananas while each bunch
will yield about 200 "fingers" or bananas. An
average bunch of bananas can weigh between 80 and 125 pounds
(35 to 50 kilograms). Two-man teams harvest the bananas.
While one man whacks the bunch with his machete, the other
catches the falling bunch onto his shoulders and transfers
it to a hook attached to one of a series of conveyer cables
that run throughout the plantation. Though bananas can be
left to ripen on the plant, they would perish too quickly.
It is important that they are harvested in the green state
at just the right time. If harvested too early, they would
develop a floury pulp instead of a delightfully sweet flavor.
Bananas
begin the ripening process as soon as they are harvested,
when laboratory tests have shown that they contain 20% starch
and 1% sugar. When the bananas turn yellow with some brown
spots, they are fully ripened, and these figures are completely
reversed. The sugar content breaks down as follows: 66%
sucrose, 14% fructose, and 20% glucose. After the bananas
have been harvested, the giant stems are cut down to provide
rich humus for the next crop that has already begun to sprout
new shoots. Each plantation has a packing station where
bananas are graded for quality. Those that are poor quality
are sold in local markets or pureed and used as animal feed.
The next step is to cut the bananas into individual hands
and wash them in a water bath to stop "bleeding"
their natural latex or rubber substance that tends to stain
the bananas as well as clothing.
Though there are many countries where bananas
are grown, not all grow them for export. Brazil, China,
India, and Thailand grow them as a local food source and
export very few. The major exporters include Ecuador, Costa
Rica, Colombia, Honduras, the Philippines, Panama, and Guatemala.
Surprisingly, 80% of the bananas grown throughout the world
are of the plantain or cooking variety. To many tropical
cultures, plantains are an important part of the daily diet
and are prepared in as many ways as other cultures have
devised for potatoes. Plantains may be more familiar to
you as banana chips that are first dried, then fried. These
cooking bananas are even employed in the brewing of beer
in some areas of East Africa. Brazil and Kenya grow a unique
fruit banana called Apple Banana whose flavor reminds one
of an apple. This special variety is only three to four
inches in length. Another special variety is the Lady's
Finger, an especially small banana with a sweet, creamy
texture that grows in Thailand, Malaysia, and Colombia.
You can recognize the Red Banana by its reddish brown skin.
The flesh inside also has a reddish tinge, and the flavor
is sweet with a satin-like texture. These grow in most regions
where bananas thrive.