articlehaul.com articlehaul.com
Search:    Index Page :> About Us :> Privacy of Info :> Terms of Use :> Add Your Link :> Submit Article   
Add Your Link
 

Self Help

Healthcare & Medicine

Education & Learning

Travel & Accommodation

Online Shopping

Adventure & Sports

Drink & Food

Research & Science

Finance & Investment

Careers & Employment

News & Media

Relationship & Lifestyle

Health & Hygiene

Family & Home

Recreation & Entertainment

Vehicles & Automotive

Art & Culture

Computers & Networking

Politics & Government

Property & Estate

Teens & Kids

Indoor Games

People & Communities

Companies & Business


 

Index Page –› Drink & Food –› Vegetables & Fruits
 

Going Bananas

 

Despite the popular song from 1957, Yellow Bird, bananas are not grown on a tree but on a tall rigid stalk consisting of the tightly wound leaf stems. A banana plant contains no wood. Bananas are closely related to the herb, and are started from a bulb or "root eye" much like the planting of potatoes. A perennial, the banana plant bears only one bunch of fruit per year. The time from planting to harvest is from 9 to 12 months with the plant reaching heights of up to 30 feet. After the plant is chopped down, new sprouts will appear from the stumps in a matter of days in order to produce the next year's crop.

Banana growing in Barbados and in most of the Caribbean is very labor intensive. The ground must be kept free of undergrowth; the stalks must be irrigated during the dry season, and propped up in the mature stage to prevent them from bending under the weight of the bananas; and, as the bananas near harvest time, each bunch must be covered with plastic bags to ward off the insects and to hide the sweet fruit from the birds. Bananas for export are harvested green and hard, before they mature and ripen. The difference in taste between a banana that has been "forced ripened" and one that is "picked straight away" is one of life's simple pleasures that must be experienced.

Two men are required to harvest bananas: a chopper and a catcher. The chopper uses a machete to slice the stalk in half about waist high and, as it falls, the catcher "catches" the bunch which can weigh from 50 to 70 pounds. These bunchs are then transported to a ripening shed for local consumption or to a packing shed for export.

A local inside joke is about the occasional tourist who, mistaking a plantain for a banana, takes a bite of the plantain and recoils from the slightly bitter, raw squash taste. Plantains are twice the size of our local bananas---known colloquially as figs---and are easily distinguishable from the sweet fruit. Plantains, it should be mentioned, must be cooked like a vegetable before eating.

Author: Billy O'Dell
 
Author Bio:
Billy O'Dell is a specialist in this area. Billy has written several articles in the past on this topic.
This article can be searched using: fruit, vegetables, fruits, vegetable garden, vegetable, vegetable recipes, vegetable gardening
 
 
 

Related Articles

 
A Guide To Retail Wine Racks
 
7 Tips for a Fun and Memorable Wine Tasting
 
Get Back in Shape With this Healthy Low Calorie Recipe
 
Your Kitchen Wants to be Sexy - Top 5 Snazzy, Sexy Coffee Makers that are Sensational
 
The Proper Care and Storage for Wine
 
Happy Healthy Hollidays with this Eggnog Recipe
 
Heartburn and Coffee: Break the Connection
 
Baking Bread and Your Freezer
 
Action of Alcohol on Internal Organs
 
The Basics Of Wine Tasting
 
 
 
 
 

Vitamin C- Ascorbic Acid Benefits, Deficiency and Sources

Vitamin C (ascorbic acid) is a water-soluble vitamin. The main dietary sources of vitamin C are fres ... - Dr John Anne
 

3 Easy Crockpot Hamburger Dip Recipes

Hamburger recipes are pretty easy to come by. The following recipes are crockpot specific, and are r ... - Kara Kelso
 

Caffeine - I Bet You Didn't Know This! Health and Nutrition!

What exactly is caffeine? It is a colorless, somewhat bitter substance that is found in coffee, tea, ... - Nick A. James
 
 

How to get the Max from your Caterer

Without food it's not a party. - Ellen Zucker
 

Coffee - How It Becomes Decaf

The main ingredient and reason why people buy coffee is, of course, caffeine. But many people like t ... - Michael Russell
 
 
Index Page :> Privacy of Info :> Terms of Use
Copyright © 2008 www.articlehaul.com All Rights Reserved.