Thursday, June 9, 2016

One banana, two banana........


Banana boat!




Bananas are the most popular fruit in the world. The banana is, in fact, not a tree but a high herb that grows up to 15 metres. It is believed that there are almost 1000 varieties of bananas in the world, subdivided in 50 groups. The most commonly known banana is the Cavendish variety, which is the one produced for export markets.
Bananas are grown in more than 150 countries, producing 105 million tonnes of fruit per year. The bananas grown for local consumption are generally grown in traditional, extensive systems. Dessert bananas account for 43 million tonnes per year and are of huge economic importance for many countries in the South. Cooking bananas (plantains and others) account for 45 million tonnes. Locally consumed bananas, which are a staple food in many tropical countries, play a major role in terms of food security.
It is believed that the earliest written reference to banana is in Sanskrit and dates back to around 500 BC. Bananas are suspected to be the first fruit in the earth by some horticulturists. Their origin is placed in Southeast Asia, in the jungles of Malaysia, Indonesia or Philippines, where many varieties of wild bananas still grow today. Africans are credited to have given the present name, since the word banana would be derived from the Arab for ‘finger’. They started to be traded internationally by the end of fourteenth century. The development of railroads and technological advances in refrigerated maritime transport subsequently enabled bananas to become the most important world traded fruit.

Banana facts

  • On average each person in the UK eats 10kg bananas a year – about 100 bananas!
  • In Britain, we eat over five billion bananas every year
  • The word banana comes from the Arabic word "banan", meaning finger
  • The banana plant is not a tree, it is the world's largest herb
  • The "trunk" of a banana plant is not made of wood, it is made of tightly overlapping leaves
  • Bananas could help you to feel happier as they contain tryptophan, a type of protein that the body converts into serotonin, known to promote relaxation and improve mood
  • The inside of a banana skin can be used to calm an itchy mosquito bite - many people find that rubbing the bite with the skin helps to reduce irritation
  • A medium-sized banana contains only 95 calories, and provides a quick-but-sustained energy boost in a natural, nutritious and easily digestible form with no fat, cholesterol or sodium
  • British Banana supplier, Fyffes, received its first consignment of bananas 124 years ago, in September 1888
  • A stem of bananas consists of “hands”, which consist of 10 to 20 bananas.  When a hand is split, the bananas become “clusters”, which generally consist of between three to eight bananas
  • The inside of a banana skin can be used to polish shoes!
  • Bananas may have been the world's first cultivated fruit. Archaeologists have found evidence of banana cultivation in New Guinea as far back as 8000 B.C.
  • Bananas are produced mainly in tropical and subtropical areas of Africa, Asia and the Americas, as well as the Canary Islands and Australia.
  • Bananas do not grow on trees. The banana plant is classified as an arborescent (tree-like) perennial herb, and the banana itself is considered a berry.
  • The correct name for a bunch of bananas is a hand; a single banana is a finger.
  • Nearly all the bananas sold in stores are cloned from just one variety, the Cavendish banana plant, originally native to Southeast Asia.
  • The Cavendish replaced the Gros Michel after that variety was wiped out by fungus. The Gros Michel reportedly was bigger, had a longer shelf life and tasted better.
  • The Cavendish may face the same fate as the Gros Michel within the next 20 years, botanists say.
  • Bananas are also called plantains. But in general use, "banana" refers to the sweeter form of the fruit, which is often eaten uncooked, while "plantain" refers to a starchier fruit that is often cooked before eating.
  • There are 50 recognized species of banana.
  • Wild bananas grow throughout Southeast Asia, but most are inedible for humans, as they are studded with hard seeds.
  • The vast majority of bananas grown today are for consumption by the farmers or the local community. Only 15 percent of the global production of the fruit is grown for export.
  • India is the leading producer of bananas worldwide, accounting for 23 percent of the total banana production, though most of the Indian plantains are for domestic use.
  • In 1923, sheet music for a popular song titled "Yes, We Have No Bananas!" sold upward of a thousand copies a day.
  • Harry Belafonte's version of the "Banana Boat Song" was released on the first album to sell over a million copies, Belafonte's "Calypso."
- See more at: http://www.livescience.com/45005-banana-nutrition-facts.html#sthash.Ggzc8vPX.dpuf
  • Bananas may have been the world's first cultivated fruit. Archaeologists have found evidence of banana cultivation in New Guinea as far back as 8000 B.C.
  • Bananas are produced mainly in tropical and subtropical areas of Africa, Asia and the Americas, as well as the Canary Islands and Australia.
  • Bananas do not grow on trees. The banana plant is classified as an arborescent (tree-like) perennial herb, and the banana itself is considered a berry.
  • The correct name for a bunch of bananas is a hand; a single banana is a finger.
  • Nearly all the bananas sold in stores are cloned from just one variety, the Cavendish banana plant, originally native to Southeast Asia.
  • The Cavendish replaced the Gros Michel after that variety was wiped out by fungus. The Gros Michel reportedly was bigger, had a longer shelf life and tasted better.
  • The Cavendish may face the same fate as the Gros Michel within the next 20 years, botanists say.
  • Bananas are also called plantains. But in general use, "banana" refers to the sweeter form of the fruit, which is often eaten uncooked, while "plantain" refers to a starchier fruit that is often cooked before eating.
  • There are 50 recognized species of banana.
  • Wild bananas grow throughout Southeast Asia, but most are inedible for humans, as they are studded with hard seeds.
  • The vast majority of bananas grown today are for consumption by the farmers or the local community. Only 15 percent of the global production of the fruit is grown for export.
  • India is the leading producer of bananas worldwide, accounting for 23 percent of the total banana production, though most of the Indian plantains are for domestic use.
  • In 1923, sheet music for a popular song titled "Yes, We Have No Bananas!" sold upward of a thousand copies a day.
  • Harry Belafonte's version of the "Banana Boat Song" was released on the first album to sell over a million copies, Belafonte's "Calypso."
- See more at: http://www.livescience.com/45005-banana-nutrition-facts.html#sthash.Ggzc8vPX.dpuf
  • Bananas may have been the world's first cultivated fruit. Archaeologists have found evidence of banana cultivation in New Guinea as far back as 8000 B.C.
  • Bananas are produced mainly in tropical and subtropical areas of Africa, Asia and the Americas, as well as the Canary Islands and Australia.
  • Bananas do not grow on trees. The banana plant is classified as an arborescent (tree-like) perennial herb, and the banana itself is considered a berry.
  • The correct name for a bunch of bananas is a hand; a single banana is a finger.
  • Nearly all the bananas sold in stores are cloned from just one variety, the Cavendish banana plant, originally native to Southeast Asia.
  • The Cavendish replaced the Gros Michel after that variety was wiped out by fungus. The Gros Michel reportedly was bigger, had a longer shelf life and tasted better.
  • The Cavendish may face the same fate as the Gros Michel within the next 20 years, botanists say.
  • Bananas are also called plantains. But in general use, "banana" refers to the sweeter form of the fruit, which is often eaten uncooked, while "plantain" refers to a starchier fruit that is often cooked before eating.
  • There are 50 recognized species of banana.
  • Wild bananas grow throughout Southeast Asia, but most are inedible for humans, as they are studded with hard seeds.
  • The vast majority of bananas grown today are for consumption by the farmers or the local community. Only 15 percent of the global production of the fruit is grown for export.
  • India is the leading producer of bananas worldwide, accounting for 23 percent of the total banana production, though most of the Indian plantains are for domestic use.
  • In 1923, sheet music for a popular song titled "Yes, We Have No Bananas!" sold upward of a thousand copies a day.
  • Harry Belafonte's version of the "Banana Boat Song" was released on the first album to sell over a million copies, Belafonte's "Calypso."
- See more at: http://www.livescience.com/45005-banana-nutrition-facts.html#sthash.Ggzc8vPX.dpuf
Source: http://www.bananalink.org.uk/all-about-bananas



4 comments:

  1. I have to hand it to you, this post was very appeeling, I liked the way you slipped in lots of information.
    I think I will head out to the kitchen and tally me bananas.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. LOL! I peel a lot of videos from the internet... :o)

      Delete
  2. Good one John!

    A recipe:
    http://www.tasteofcuba.com/platanostentaction.html
    Mmmmmmmmmm

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I think John should start a blog, too! He's funny! :o)

      Delete