Use Of Banana

@Jackdd (10)
India
November 19, 2006 7:02am CST
Strokes: -According to research in "The New England Journal of Medicine," eating bananas as part of a regular diet can cut the risk of death by strokes by as much as 40%!
2 people like this
7 responses
@fletch86 (75)
• United States
19 Nov 06
The origin of bananas is traced back to the Malaysian jungles of Southeast Asia, where so many varieties and names for the banana are in that area. Some horticulturists suspect that the banana was the earth's first fruit. Banana plants have been in cultivation since the time of recorded history. One of the first records of bananas dates back to Alexander the Great's conquest of India where he first discovered bananas in 327 B.C. In some lands bananas were considered the principal food. Early travelers and settlers would carry the roots of the plant as they migrated to the Middle East and Africa. From there Portuguese traders carried banana roots to the Canary Islands, where bananas are still grown commercially. When Spanish explorers came to the New World, so did the banana. According to Spanish history, Friar Tomas de Berlanga brought the first banana root stocks to the Western Hemisphere. In 1516, Friar Tomas sailed to the Caribbean bringing banana roots with him; and planted bananas in the rich, fertile soil of the tropics, thus beginning the banana's future in American life. Bananas were officially introduced to the American public at the 1876 Philadelphia Centennial Exhibition. Each banana was wrapped in foil and sold for 10 cents. Before that time, bananas came to America on the decks of sailing ships as sailors took a few stems home after traveling in the Caribbean. In the late 1870's, with the invention of the telegraph and the development of the Central American railroads, the banana industry finally took shape. Systematized growing fields and refrigerated steamships signaled the end of an era when bulky full stems of bananas were shipped on sailing vessels. Banana plantings are in production for many years. The conventional hexagonal plantation design is the industry standard, which contains an average of 1,800 plants - or production units - per hectare. A production unit is defined as containing one main or "mother" plant and one follower or "daughter" plant. The normal interval between harvests of mother and daughter plants is 8 to 10 months. Therefore, it is estimated that the continuous production process enables banana plants to yield between 1.2 - 1.5 crops per year. Two workers are required to harvest bananas: a "cutter" and a "backer". The cutter cuts down the plant with his machete while the backer waits for the cut stem to settle on a thick cushion on his shoulder. The cutter then chops the stem to enable the daughter plant to take over as the main stalk. The backer carries the fruit and attaches it to a nearby overhead cableway where the stem is transported to the packing shed. In the packing shed, the bananas are removed hand by hand by skilled workers. A stem will hold as many as 15 hands, which are then cut into smaller clusters of 4 to 6 fingers. Each cluster is washed in large floating tanks of moving fresh water to clean them and remove field heat prior to shipping. Clusters are examined by selectors and quality control personnel for grading and sorting. The fruit is then packed for shipping in special 40-pound, corrugated boxes. The bananas are precisely arranged to prevent movement during shipping. Plastic film and paperboard padding are placed between layers to further reduce bruising. Banana boxes are loaded into special refrigerated, truckload-sized containers and driven to the port where a container ship will be scheduled to load. Bananas are loaded onto the ship within 24 to 48 hours after their cutting from the plant. Because heat and humidity speeds up the process of converting starches into sugars, which ripens the fruit, bananas are carefully maintained at 58 degrees Fahrenheit and the temperature and humidity conditions are monitored throughout the voyage. When bananas reach the destination port here in North America, they must be ripened in temperature and humidity controlled rooms before being shipped to retail produce departments for sale to consumers.
1 person likes this
@leanette (3002)
• India
19 Nov 06
whoa! nice research, but do you think anybody's gonna read the full thing?
@Sir_bobby88 (8231)
• Singapore
30 Nov 06
That is cool so eat more Bananas yea ... I love Bananas Splits
@hirals (1736)
• India
23 Nov 06
yeah... banana is very helpful for health!!
@calvin222 (1606)
• India
30 Nov 06
banana - banana
i love banana. it is a very healthy fruit. it is cheap. and available all the time.
@tibido (4079)
• Italy
19 Nov 06
what kind of banana?
@desiret (2117)
• Italy
19 Nov 06
so we have to eat more banana than other fruits!!!
@leanette (3002)
• India
19 Nov 06
thats really cool! :D