Dictionary Definition
banana
Noun
1 any of several tropical and subtropical
treelike herbs of the genus Musa having a terminal crown of large
entire leaves and usually bearing hanging clusters of elongated
fruits [syn: banana
tree]
2 elongated crescent-shaped yellow fruit with
soft sweet flesh
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
- An elongated curved fruit, which grows in bunches, and has a sweet creamy flesh and a smooth yellow skin.
- The tropical treelike plant which bears clusters of bananas. The plant, of the genus Musa, has large, elongated leaves and is related to the plantain.
- a yellow colour, like that of a banana.
- banana colour:
- In the context of "mildly|pejorative|slang": A person, especially a woman, of Asian descent, especially a Chinese American, who has assimilated into Western culture or married a Caucasian.
Antonyms
Translations
fruit
- Afrikaans: piesang
- Albanian: banane
- Arabic: (moz)
- Balinese: biu
- Basque: platano, albo
- Bosnian: banana
- Bulgarian: банан
- CJKV Characters: 蕉
- Catalan: banana, plàtan
- Chinese: 香蕉 (xiāngjiāo)
- Czech: banán
- Danish: banan
- Dutch: banaan
- Esperanto: banano
- Estonian: banaan
- Finnish: banaani
- French: banane
- German: Banane
- Greek: μπανάνα
- Hausa: agade
- Hebrew: בננה (bananah)
- Hindi: केला (kēlā)
- Hungarian: banán
- Icelandic: banani
- Ido: banano
- Indonesian: pisang
- Italian: banana
- Japanese: バナナ
- Korean: 바나나 (banana)
- Kuna: madun
- Kurdish: moz, مۆز
- Lithuanian: bananas
- Lojban: badna
- Malayalam: വാഴപ്പഴം
- Maltese: banana
- Norwegian: banan
- Persian: (muz)
- Polish: banan
- Portuguese: banana
- Romanian: banană
- Russian: банан
- Serbian:
- Slovak: banán
- Slovene: banana
- Spanish: banana , banano , cambur , guineo (Colombian Atlantic Coast, Dominican Republic, Eastern Bolivia, Eastern Cuba, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala, Nicaragua, Northern Honduras, Northwestern Venezuela, Panama, Puerto Rico, Southern and Southeastern Mexico), mínimo italbrac Central Honduras, plátano , plátano fruta italbrac Cuban standard usage
- Swahili: ndizi (nc 9/10)
- Swedish: banan
- Tagalog: saging
- Tamil: வாழைபலம்
- Tatar: banana
- Telugu: అరటిపండు
- Tetum: hudi, hudi-fuan
- Tok Pisin: banana
- Turkish: muz
- Vietnamese: (quả) chuối
- West Frisian: banaan
- Wolof: banaana
plant
- Albanian: banane
- Czech: banánovník
- Dutch: bananenplant
- French: bananier
- German: Bananenstaude
- Greek: μπανανιά
- Italian: banano
- Maltese: banana
- Polish: bananowiec
- Portuguese: bananeira
- Russian: банан
- Slovak: banánovník
- Slovene: bananovec
- Spanish: bananero
- Tagalog: puno ng saging
- Tatar: banana
- Telugu: అరటిచెట్టు
- Tetum: hudi-hun
- Vietnamese: cây chuối
colour
- Albanian: banane
- Dutch: bananengeel
- Vietnamese: màu chuối
References
- Terry Woo, Banana Boys
Adjective
banana (no or )- Containing or having the taste of bananas.
- Of the colour of bananas.
Translations
containing or tasting of bananas
of the colour of bananas
- Dutch: bananengeel, bananengele
- Vietnamese: màu chuối
Derived terms
- banana bender
- banana leaf restaurant
- banana paper
- banana pepper
- banana plug
- banana republic
- banana split
- bananaquit
- banoffee
- go bananas
- second banana
- top banana
See also
Collective nouns
Bosnian
Noun
banana f s- a banana
Catalan
Noun
banana- banana
Synonyms
Croatian
Noun
hr-noun fItalian
Noun
- banana (fruit)
Noun
banana- banana (color)
Adjective
bananaJapanese
Pronunciation
The stress is on the first syllable:
⌈ba⌉nana
Noun
- バナナ: banana
Portuguese
Synonyms
- (plant): bananeira
Romanian
Noun
- the banana
Serbian
Noun
banana f s- a banana
See also
Spanish
Noun
- banana
Related terms
See also
Tatar
Noun
bananaReferences
Tok Pisin
banana- banana
Extensive Definition
Banana is the common name
for a fruit and also the herbaceous
plants of the genus
Musa
which produce the commonly eaten fruit. They are native to the
tropical region of Southeast
Asia and Australia. Today,
they are cultivated throughout the tropics.
Banana plants are of the family
Musaceae.
They are cultivated primarily for their fruit, and to a lesser
extent for the production of fibre and as ornamental plants. As the
bananas are mainly tall, upright, and fairly sturdy, they are often
mistaken for trees, when the truth is the main or upright stem is
called a pseudostem, literally meaning "fake stem", which for some
species can obtain a height of up to 2–8 m, with leaves of up to 3.5 m in
length. Each pseudostem can produce a bunch of yellow, green, or
even red bananas before dying and being replaced by another
pseudostem.
The banana fruit grow in hanging clusters, with
up to 20 fruit to a tier (called a hand), and 3-20 tiers to a
bunch. The total of the hanging clusters is known as a bunch, or
commercially as a "banana stem", and can weigh from
30–50 kg. The fruit averages 125 g, of which
approximately 75% is water and 25% dry matter content. Each
individual fruit (known as a banana or 'finger') has a protective
outer layer (a peel or skin) with a fleshy edible inner portion.
Both skin and inner part can be eaten raw or cooked. Western
cultures generally eat the inside raw and throw away the skin while
some Asian cultures generally eat both the skin and inside cooked.
Typically, the fruit has numerous strings (called 'phloem bundles')
which run between the skin and inner part. Bananas are a valuable
source of vitamin B6,
vitamin
C, and potassium.
Bananas are grown in at least 107 countries. The
banana plant is the largest of all herbaceous plants. A single,
sterile, male banana flower, also known as the banana heart is
normally produced by each stem (though on rare occasions more can
be produced - a single plant in the Philippines has
five). Banana hearts are used as a vegetable in Southeast
Asia, steamed, in salads or eaten raw. The female flowers are
produced further up the stem and produce the actual fruit without
requiring fertilization.
Properties
Bananas come in a variety of sizes and colors when ripe, including yellow, purple and red. Bananas can be eaten raw though some varieties are generally cooked first. Depending upon cultivar and ripeness, the flesh can vary in taste from starchy to sweet, and texture from firm to mushy. Unripe or green bananas and plantains are used for cooking various dishes such as banana pudding and are the staple starch of many tropical populations. Banana sap is extremely sticky and can be used as a practical adhesive. Sap can be obtained from the pseudostem, from the fruit peelings, or from the fruit flesh.Most production for local sale is of green
cooking bananas and plantains, as ripe dessert
bananas are easily damaged while being transported to market. Even
when transported only within their country of origin, ripe bananas
suffer a high rate of damage and loss.
The commercial dessert cultivars most commonly
eaten in temperate
countries (species Musa acuminata or the hybrid
Musa × paradisiaca, a cultigen) are imported in large
quantities from the tropics. They are popular in part because,
being a non-seasonal crop, they are available fresh year-round. In
global commerce, by far the most important of these banana cultivars is 'Cavendish',
which accounts for the vast bulk of bananas exported from the
tropics. The Cavendish gained popularity in the 1950s after the
previously mass produced cultivar, Gros Michel,
became commercially unviable due to Panama
disease, a fungus which attacks the roots of the banana
plant.
The most important properties making 'Cavendish'
the main export banana are related to transport and shelf life
rather than taste; major commercial cultivars rarely have a
superior flavour compared to the less widespread cultivars. Export
bananas are picked green, and then usually ripened in ripening
rooms when they arrive in their country of destination. These are
special rooms made air-tight and filled with ethylene gas to induce
ripening. Bananas can be ordered by the retailer "ungassed",
however, and may show up at the supermarket still fully green.
While these bananas will ripen more slowly, the flavour will be
notably richer, and the banana peel can be allowed to reach a
yellow/brown speckled phase, and yet retain a firm flesh inside.
Thus, shelf life is somewhat extended. The flavour and texture of
bananas are affected by the temperature at which they ripen.
Bananas are refrigerated to between 13.5 and 15 °C (57 and
59 °F) during transportation. At lower temperatures, the
ripening of bananas permanently stalls, and the bananas will
eventually turn grey.
It should be noted that Musa × paradisiaca is
also the generic name for the common plantain, a coarser and
starchier variant not to be confused with Musa acuminata or the
Cavendish variety.
In addition to the fruit, the flower of the banana plant (also
known as banana blossom or banana heart) is used in Southeast
Asian, Bengali
and Kerala
(India) cuisine, either served raw with dips or cooked in soups and
curries. The tender core of the banana plant's trunk is also used,
notably in the Burmese dish
mohinga, Bengali and
Kerala cooking. Bananas fried
with batter is a popular dessert in Malaysia, Singapore and
Indonesia. Banana
fritters can be served with ice-cream as well. Bananas are also
eaten deep fried, baked in their skin in a split bamboo, or steamed
in glutinous
rice wrapped in a banana leaf in Myanmar where
bunches of green bananas surrounding a green coconut in a tray is
an important part of traditional offerings to the Buddha and
the Nats. The
juice extract prepared from the tender core is used to treat kidney
stones.
The leaves of the banana
are large, flexible, and waterproof; they are used in many ways,
including as umbrellas
and to wrap food for cooking, carrying and packing cooked foods,
and they are used to build houses in third world countries.. In
south India, food is traditionally served on banana leaves in homes
and some restaurants also follow the practice. Some farmers prefer
to grow banana plants only for their leaves. Chinese zongzi (bamboo leaves are more
commonly used where available) and Central
American tamales are
sometimes steamed in
banana leaves, and the Hawaiian imu is often lined with them.
Puerto
Rican "pasteles" are boiled wrapped and tied inside the
leaf.
Banana chips
are a snack (and a healthy alternative to potato chips) produced
from dehydrated or fried banana or, preferably, plantain slices,
which have a dark brown colour and an intense banana taste. Bananas
have also been used in the making of jam. Unlike other fruits, it is
difficult to extract juice from bananas because when compressed a
banana simply turns to pulp.
Seeded bananas (Musa balbisiana), considered to
be one of the forerunners of the common domesticated banana, are
sold in markets in Indonesia.
It is reported that in Orissa, India, juice is
extracted from the corm and
used as a home remedy
for the treatment of jaundice. In other places
honey is mixed with mashed
banana fruit and used for the same purpose.
Trade
Bananas and plantains constitute a major staple food crop for millions of people in developing countries. In most tropical countries, green (unripe) bananas used for cooking represent the main cultivars. Cooking bananas are very similar to potatoes in how they are used. Both can be fried, boiled, baked or chipped and have similar taste and texture when served. One green cooking banana has about the same calorie content as one potato.In 2003, India led the world
in banana production, representing approximately 23% of the
worldwide crop, most of which was for domestic consumption. The
four leading banana exporting countries were Ecuador, Costa Rica,
Philippines,
and Colombia, which
together accounted for about two-thirds of the world's exports,
each exporting more than 1 million tons. Ecuador alone provided
more than 30% of global banana exports, according to
FAO statistics.
The vast majority of producers are small-scale
farmers growing the crop
either for home consumption or for local markets. Because bananas
and plantains will
produce fruit year-round, they provide an extremely valuable source
of food during the hunger season (that period of time when all the
food from the previous harvest has been consumed, and the next
harvest is still some time away). It is for these reasons that
bananas and plantains
are of major importance to food
security. Bananas are among the most widely consumed foods in
the world. Most banana farmers receive a low unit price for their
produce as supermarkets buy enormous quantities and receive a
discount for that business. Competition amongst supermarkets has led to
reduced margins in recent years which in turn has led to lower
prices for growers.
Chiquita, Del
Monte, Dole
and Fyffes
grow their own bananas in Ecuador, Colombia, Costa Rica, Guatemala and
Honduras.
Banana plantations are capital intensive and demand high expertise,
so the majority of independent growers are large and wealthy
landowners of these countries. This has led to bananas being
available as a "fair trade"
item in some countries.
The banana has an extensive trade history
beginning with the founding of the United
Fruit Company (now Chiquita) at the end of the nineteenth
century. For much of the 20th century, bananas and coffee dominated the export
economies of Central America. In the 1930s, bananas and coffee made
up as much as 75% of the region's exports. As late as 1960, the two
crops accounted for 67% of the exports from the region. Though the
two were grown in similar regions, they tended not to be
distributed together. The United
Fruit Company based its business almost entirely on the banana
trade, as the coffee trade proved too difficult for it to control.
The term "banana
republic" has been broadly applied to most countries in Central
America, but from a strict economic perspective only Costa Rica,
Honduras, and Panama were actual
"banana republics", countries with economies dominated by the
banana trade. The countries of the European
Union have traditionally imported many of their bananas from
the former European island colonies of the Caribbean, paying
guaranteed prices above global market rates. As of 2005,
these arrangements were in the process of being withdrawn under
pressure from other major trading powers, principally the United
States. The withdrawal of these indirect subsidies to Caribbean
producers is expected to favour the banana producers of Central
America, in which American companies have an economic
interest.
The United States has minimal banana production.
14,000 tons of bananas were grown in Hawaii in 2001. Bananas have
also been grown in Florida.
History
Early cultivation
The domestication of bananas took place in
southeastern Asia. Many species of wild bananas still occur in New
Guinea, Malaysia, Indonesia and the Philippines. Recent
archaeological and palaeoenvironmental evidence at Kuk Swamp in
the Western Highlands Province of Papua New Guinea suggests that
banana cultivation there goes back to at least 5000 BCE, and possibly to
8000 BCE. This would make the New Guinean highlands the place where
bananas were first domesticated. It is likely that other species of
wild bananas were later also domesticated elsewhere in southeastern
Asia.
Textiles
The banana plant has long been a source of fibre for high quality textiles. In Japan, the cultivation of banana for clothing and household use dates back to at least the 13th century. In the Japanese system, leaves and shoots are cut from the plant periodically to ensure softness. The harvested shoots must first be boiled in lye to prepare the fibres for the making of the yarn. These banana shoots produce fibres of varying degrees of softness, yielding yarns and textiles with differing qualities for specific uses. For example, the outermost fibres of the shoots are the coarsest, and are suitable for tablecloths, whereas the softest innermost fibres are desirable for kimono and kamishimo. This traditional Japanese banana cloth making process requires many steps, all performed by hand.In another system employed in Nepal, the trunk of
the banana plant is harvested instead, small pieces of which are
subjected to a softening process, mechanical extraction of the
fibres, bleaching, and drying. After that, the fibres are sent to
the Kathmandu
valley for the making of high end rugs with a textural quality
similar to silk. These banana fibre rugs are woven by the
traditional Nepalese hand-knotted methods, and are sold RugMark certified.
Paper
Banana fibre is also used in the production of banana paper. Banana paper is used in two different senses: to refer to a paper made from the bark of the banana plant, mainly used for artistic purposes, or paper made from banana fiber, obtained from an industrialized process, from the stem and the non utilizable fruits. This paper can be either hand-made or made by industrialized machine.Storage and transport
In the current world marketing system, bananas
are grown in the tropics where hurricanes are not common. The fruit
therefore has to be transported over long distances and storage is
necessary. To gain maximum life bunches are harvested before the
fruit is fully mature. The fruit is carefully handled, transported
quickly to the seaboard, cooled and shipped under sophisticated
refrigeration. The basis of this procedure is to prevent the
bananas producing ethylene which is the natural ripening agent of
the fruit. This sophisticated technology allows storage and
transport for 3-4 weeks at 13 degrees Celsius. On arrival at the
destination the bananas are held at about 17 degrees Celsius and
treated with a low concentration of ethylene. After a few days the
fruit has begun to ripen and it is distributed for retail sale. It
is important to note that unripe bananas can not be held in the
home refrigerator as they suffer from the cold. After ripening some
bananas can be held for a few days in the home refrigerator. They
can be stored indefinitely frozen, then eaten like a Popsicle or cooked
or as a banana mush.
Australian researchers have clearly shown that
the use of refrigeration is no longer essential to extend the life
of bananas after harvest.
The above references report that the presence of
carbon dioxide (which is produced by the fruit) extends the life
and the addition of an ethylene absorbent further extends the life
even at high temperatures. This simple technology involves packing
the fruit in a polyethylene bag and including an ethylene
absorbent, potassium
permanganate, on an inert carrier. The bag is then sealed with
a band or string. This low cost treatment more than doubles the
life at a range of temperatures and can give a life of up to 3-4
weeks without the need of refrigeration. The method is suitable for
bunches, hands and even fingers.
The technology has been successfully tested over
long distances and has been confirmed by researchers in a number of
countries. The longest commercial trial was from North Queensland
to New Zealand by unrefrigerated rail and ship over 18 days.
Importers thought that the treated bananas were harvested on the
day of arrival!
Although the technology has been extensively
published in recognized scientific journals and has considerable
cost savings (including energy savings) it has not been widely
adopted. This report is to encourage banana growers in even poor
countries to try out the technology themselves. It is suggested
that a freshly harvested bunch be taken and a few hands be selected
and each cut in two. Half of each hand should be sealed in a
polyethylene bag the other half hands should be left untreated.
Even without the ethylene absorbent the beneficial effect should be
obvious in a few days. Growers can then decide whether to try the
full technology.
Usage in culture
Peels
The depiction of a person slipping on a banana peel has been a staple of physical comedy for generations. A 1906 comedy record produced by Edison Records features a popular character of the time, "Cal Stewart", claiming to describe his own such incident, saying:I don't think much of a man what throws a bananer
peelin' on the sidewalk, and I don't think much of a bananer what
throws a man on the sidewalk, neither. ... my foot hit that bananer
peelin' and I went up in the air, and come down ker-plunk, and fer
about a minnit I seen all the stars what 'stronomy tells about, and
some that hain't been discovered yit. Wall jist as I was pickin'
myself up, a little boy come runnin' cross the street and he said,
"Oh mister, won't you please do that agin? My mother didn't see you
do it."
Stereotypes
Arts
- The poet Bashō is named after the Japanese word for a banana plant. The "bashō" planted in his garden by a grateful student became a source of inspiration to his poetry, as well as a symbol of his life and home.
- The song Yes, We Have No Bananas was written by Frank Silver and Irving Cohn and originally released in 1923. Since then the song has been re-recorded several times and has been particularly popular during banana shortages.
Symbols
Bananas are also humorously used as a phallic symbol due to similarities in size and shape. This is typified by the artwork of the debut album of The Velvet Underground, which features a banana on the front cover, yet on the original LP version, the design allowed the listener to 'peel' this banana to find a pink, phallic structure on the inside.Gallery
See also
Culinary usage
Footnotes
References
- Banana overview - Banana details by IITA
- FAO. Bananas Commodity notes: Final results of the 2003 season, 2004
- Denham, T., Haberle, S. G., Lentfer, C., Fullagar, R., Field, J., Porch, N., Therin, M., Winsborough B., and Golson, J. Multi-disciplinary Evidence for the Origins of Agriculture from 6950-6440 Cal BP at Kuk Swamp in the Highlands of New Guinea. Science, June 2003 issue.
- Skidmore, T., Smith, P. - Modern Latin America (5th edition), (2001) New York: Oxford University Press)
- Brief mention of banana fibre rugs
- Banana etymology, banana flour
- Watson, Andrew. Agricultural innovation in the early Islamic world, New York: Cambridge University Press, 1983.
External links
banana in Arabic: موز
banana in Asturian: Plátanu
banana in Aymara: Puquta
banana in Bengali: কলা (ফল)
banana in Min Nan: Kin-chio
banana in Bosnian: Banana
banana in Bulgarian: Банан
banana in Catalan: Banana
banana in Czech: Banán
banana in Welsh: Banana
banana in Danish: Banan
banana in German: Bananen
banana in Modern Greek (1453-): Μπανάνα
banana in Spanish: Musa × paradisiaca
banana in Esperanto: Banano
banana in Persian: موز
banana in French: Banane
banana in Scottish Gaelic: Banana
banana in Galician: Banana
banana in Gan Chinese: 香蕉
banana in Korean: 바나나
banana in Croatian: Banana
banana in Ido: Banano
banana in Indonesian: Pisang
banana in Icelandic: Banani
banana in Italian: Banana
banana in Hebrew: בננה
banana in Javanese: Gedhang
banana in Pampanga: Sagin
banana in Georgian: ბანანი
banana in Kinyarwanda: Umuneke
banana in Swahili (macrolanguage): Ndizi
banana in Haitian: Bannann
banana in Latin: Banana
banana in Lithuanian: Bananas
banana in Hungarian: Banán
banana in Malagasy: Akondro
banana in Malayalam: വാഴ
banana in Malay (macrolanguage): Pokok
Pisang
banana in Dutch: Banaan (fruit)
banana in Cree: Min kauakashkuat
banana in Japanese: バナナ
banana in Norwegian: Bananer
banana in Norwegian Nynorsk: Banan
banana in Polish: Banan
banana in Portuguese: Banana
banana in Romanian: Banană
banana in Quechua: Puquchi
banana in Russian: Банан
banana in Simple English: Banana
banana in Slovak: Banán
banana in Slovenian: Bananovec
banana in Serbian: Банана
banana in Sundanese: Cau
banana in Finnish: Ruokabanaani
banana in Swedish: Banan
banana in Tagalog: Saging
banana in Tamil: வாழை
banana in Telugu: అరటి
banana in Thai: กล้วย
banana in Vietnamese: Chuối
banana in Tonga (Tonga Islands): Fusi
banana in Turkish: Muz
banana in Ukrainian: Банан
banana in Yiddish: באנאן
banana in Contenese: 蕉
banana in Samogitian: Banans
banana in Chinese: 香蕉
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
burlesquer, caricaturist, clown, comedian, comic, cutup, epigrammatist, funnyman, gag writer, gagman, gagster, humorist, ironist, jester, joker, jokesmith, jokester, lampooner, madcap, parodist, prankster, punner, punster, quipster, reparteeist, satirist, wag, wagwit, wisecracker, wit, witling, zany