Thursday, 10 September 2015 06:15

11 Things You Never Knew About Bananas

Bananas growing in Gran Canaria Bananas growing in Gran Canaria www.photosgrancanaria.com

Bananas don't grow on trees and won't exist in 20 years. The plants hate growing alone and wander about in their fields. Here are ten surprising facts about the happy yellow fruit that you never knew. Watch the video right to the end for the talking banana.

Bananas don't grow on trees

There's no such thing as a banana tree as banana plants are actually the tallest herb in the world; Their 'trunks', just long leaf stalks wrapped around each other, can be nine metres tall. Since the plants are herbs, the fruits are technically berries.

You can chop a banana plant down at the base with one swipe of a machete because the main stem is actually soft.

Banana plants get sunburn and hate being lonely

Banana plant stems and flowers get sunburned easily and need shade during the midday sun. Luckily their big leaves act like parasols and create their own shade. That's why banana plants grow best in big groups as they shade each other. If you want to grow banana plants at home, you need plenty of space so that you grow a clump rather than just one plant.

That's a hand, not a bunch

What you buy in the supermarket is a hand of bananas rather than a bunch. A real bunch of bananas is made up of lots of hands. The Guinness World Record for the biggest bunch of bananas is held by El Hiero island for a 130 kg, 473-banana whopper.

Bananas come from Southeast Asia

Bananas were first grown in Papua New Guinea and spread to Madagascar and Africa thousands of years ago. The arrived in the Middle East and Europe thanks to the spread of Islam. While we think of bananas growing in the Caribbean, they are newcomers to the region and were probably growing in the Canary Islands before hey reached the Americas. The oldest known British banana was discovered in a Tudor rubbish dump in 1999.

You can't grow banana seeds

Cultivated bananas never produce seeds so you have to grow them from the suckers that grow at the base of each plant.

Banana plants wander about

Because you can't tell a banana plant where to produce its next sucker, you can't grow them in rows. You can plant them in rows, but they move around over time as the stems die and new suckers grow. The older the banana plantation, the more higgledy-piggledy the plants.

Each banana plant only produces one bunch of bananas

Banana plants grow fast, produce a bunch of bananas and then die only to be replaced by the biggest sucker at the base of the trunk. In the canary islands, each sucker grows into a big banana plant, produces a bunch of bananas and dies within a year.

Upside down fruit

Bananas start life pointing downwards. As they grow and ripen they turn towards the sky and by the time they ripen, the tips are pointing upwards.

Most bananas don't taste great because they hate the cold

As soon as you refrigerate a banana, the enzymes that turn starch into sugar stop working properly. Once they warm up again, the fruit ripens and goes yellow but it's never as sweet as a fruit that hasn't been chilled. All bananas sold in Europe, and most supermarket bananas in the Canary Islands, have been chilled.

To taste a banana at it's best, buy a bunch from small local shops in Gran Canaria. They get their fruit directly from the grower so they are never put in a fridge. Put a hand on a sunny windowsill and wait until the peel goes bright yellow and develops a few little black spots before eating them. You'll never taste a better banana.

The banana is doomed

A fungus called Panama disease is wiping out the most common type of banana plant called a Cavendish, in Asia and is expected to spread around the world. Because banana plants don't produce seeds they are genetically very similar and all die if they get Panama disease. There's no sign of it in the Canary Islands yet but experts think that the banana as we know it. Enjoy them while you can.

You can eat more than the fruit

Half of the bananas grown around the world are plantains and never get sweet. Instead, they are cooked and eaten like potatoes, or made into beer. Banana leafs are used as natural plates all over Asia and as a wrap to steam food in Asia and South America. In Asia the inside of the big pink flower at the bottom of a bunch of bananas is chopped up and used as a vegetable and in Burma, they even curry the heart of the banana plant stem. Banana leaf and stem fibres are used to make fibre for cloth in Japan and for basket and rope weaving in Africa. In the Canary Islands, fresh banana leaves are fed to cows and goats and the dried leaves are used as stable bedding.

In the Canary Islands, we even make bananas into wine.

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The video: Watch to the end for the talking banana www.gran-canaria-info.com

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Tip of the day

  • The Parafarmacia In Gran Canaria Is Not A Chemist!
    The Parafarmacia In Gran Canaria Is Not A Chemist!

    If there is one thing we hate it is visitors being tricked in Gran Canaria. In the past we've warned about overcharging at Gran Canaria chemists, and rip off electronics shops in resorts. 

    In this Tip Of The Day we return to the island's chemists or rather, to the island's fake chemists.

    A chemist in Gran Canaria is called a Farmacia and always has a green cross sign. Farmacias are the only place tobuy medicine in Spain, even basics like paracetamol.

    However, there is another kind of shop in Gran Canaria that looks and sounds like a chemist but doesn't sell medicine. This is the Parafarmacia and it also uses a green cross sign.

    A parafarmacia is a herbal medicine shop that is not allowed to sell any normal medicine such as paracetamol, ibuprofen or antibiotics. 

    Instead, parafarmacias sell herbal alternatives to medicine but don't have to prove that they work and they can charge whatever they want.

    We recently heard from a visitor to Gran Canaria who went into a parafarmacia and was charged 40 euros for a herbal alternative to Ibuprofen. It was only when they read the label that they realised what had happened. 

    To locate a genuine farmacia, see this website and search within your municipio (Puerto Rico is in Mogán, Playa del Inglés is in San Bartolomé de Tirajana). At weekends and on fiesta days many farmacias close but there is always one open, known as the farmacia de guardia, in each municipio.

    Search for the nearest one to you with this tool

    Lex Says: To keep costs down, see this article for the way to ask for generic medicine rather than expensive branded alternatives. 

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