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LizBeth

(9,952 posts)
Sat Jul 24, 2021, 02:45 PM Jul 2021

Rubbery bananas.

I googled but could not find the answer, though others were asking too. Does anyone know why periodically I will buy bananas that look good but they are rubbery. When I try to break them up for my smoothies they just bend, not really break up easily and the smoothie is so thick cause the banana did not break down normally in the mixer.

Curious, .... Gotta find the answers, lol.

31 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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Rubbery bananas. (Original Post) LizBeth Jul 2021 OP
Mistook it for a... mbusby Jul 2021 #1
Nope, a Dole banana. It is only recently I have been seeing it and not often but time enough. LizBeth Jul 2021 #2
Stop grocery shopping in the decorative fruit section of housewares? Hugin Jul 2021 #3
;) LizBeth Jul 2021 #8
I too am a bananaphile. Hugin Jul 2021 #10
Gros Michel was the variety when I was a kid (this would be about 50 years ago) . . . hatrack Jul 2021 #18
Bananaphile KentuckyWoman Jul 2021 #20
Bananavore Hugin Jul 2021 #27
We grow bananas and if picked green sometimes they just don't ripen enough. LakeArenal Jul 2021 #4
Perfectly yellow showing ripe but yes, inside is like unripe and that is the taste also. LizBeth Jul 2021 #7
Meh, green bananas are supposedly better for you. CrackityJones75 Jul 2021 #13
I heard they both have different qualities and if I remember, I like what I got more with the LizBeth Jul 2021 #14
It's very hard to peel green bananas. LakeArenal Jul 2021 #26
I've noticed also Tink41 Jul 2021 #5
+1 LizBeth Jul 2021 #6
A couple of months ago I got a bad bunch Ritabert Jul 2021 #9
One of these is ripe 48656c6c6f20 Jul 2021 #11
#2 LizBeth Jul 2021 #12
#2 is OK 48656c6c6f20 Jul 2021 #22
Wow, I would use the ugly black one for banana bread or pancakes. LizBeth Jul 2021 #23
Just A Guess ProfessorGAC Jul 2021 #15
Fascinating. Awesome. Thank you. I think you are on the right track. LizBeth Jul 2021 #17
Possible ProfessorGAC Jul 2021 #19
Are you sure you didn't accidentally purchase a decorative fake? Crunchy Frog Jul 2021 #16
It may be a plantain obamanut2012 Jul 2021 #21
Not really related to your thread but... yonder Jul 2021 #24
They're all picked green for longer life while shipping, but sometimes there are ones so green... Hekate Jul 2021 #25
Oh, that is interesting about the apple. LizBeth Jul 2021 #28
The apple gives off ethylene oxide Wicked Blue Jul 2021 #29
Could they have accidentally been frozen? rurallib Jul 2021 #30
That could be and that would make sense. Thanks. LizBeth Jul 2021 #31

LizBeth

(9,952 posts)
2. Nope, a Dole banana. It is only recently I have been seeing it and not often but time enough.
Sat Jul 24, 2021, 02:49 PM
Jul 2021

Weird and yukky.

Hugin

(33,163 posts)
3. Stop grocery shopping in the decorative fruit section of housewares?
Sat Jul 24, 2021, 02:51 PM
Jul 2021

I kid! I kid!



Seriously, I wonder if it's a ripeness issue or maybe a slightly different variety of banana.

Hugin

(33,163 posts)
10. I too am a bananaphile.
Sat Jul 24, 2021, 03:08 PM
Jul 2021

I love me some bananas.

I do know that the bananas we get today aren't even remotely related to the bananas from years ago. They're very susceptible to various fungi.

Maybe they've come up with a new variety that is more transportable, but, as always yukky. Like with tomatoes, carrots, and avacados.

hatrack

(59,587 posts)
18. Gros Michel was the variety when I was a kid (this would be about 50 years ago) . . .
Sat Jul 24, 2021, 03:43 PM
Jul 2021

It became commercially extinct and was replaced by the Cavendish, which is the dominant commodity banana today.

It's on the way out as well:

https://www.npr.org/2011/08/30/139787380/bananas-the-uncertain-future-of-a-favorite-fruit

KentuckyWoman

(6,687 posts)
20. Bananaphile
Sat Jul 24, 2021, 03:47 PM
Jul 2021

You do realize I am now going to find every which way I can to shock the old ladies in my retirement village with that word.

Thank you.

LizBeth

(9,952 posts)
14. I heard they both have different qualities and if I remember, I like what I got more with the
Sat Jul 24, 2021, 03:29 PM
Jul 2021

green than the more ripe. I thought that interesting, different nutrient qualities. Regardless, it made for a nasty smoothie.

Tink41

(537 posts)
5. I've noticed also
Sat Jul 24, 2021, 02:59 PM
Jul 2021

Most of my grocery purchases are Amazon or Whole Foods since the pandemic. Somewhere in the middle of all this the bananas became odd. Won't peel from top, rubbery like you said. Sometimes they are brown inside and watery despite being tinged with green and just starting to yellow. My daughter remarked on this last week also.

Ritabert

(668 posts)
9. A couple of months ago I got a bad bunch
Sat Jul 24, 2021, 03:03 PM
Jul 2021

Very peculiar odor and taste almost like petroleum. I spit it out and tossed the whole bunch.

 

48656c6c6f20

(7,638 posts)
11. One of these is ripe
Sat Jul 24, 2021, 03:26 PM
Jul 2021

The others should not be eaten. I'll go with the non yellow ripe one that bends.



ProfessorGAC

(65,076 posts)
15. Just A Guess
Sat Jul 24, 2021, 03:34 PM
Jul 2021

There's an enzyme in bananas called pectinstearase.
This enzyme helps the reaction with the naturally occurring ethylene in the banana (it's what ripens them). That reaction breaks and terminates some of the natural polymers that make up the fruit's fibers.
If a crop of bananas were to be lower in that enzyme, those reactions would slow and the fruit would still be loaded with the longer, unsubstituted chains.
Since those chains make up polymeric fibers, just like in rubber & plastics, the rigidity & elasticity become a function of those longer, undisrupted chains.
Like I said, I'm guessing because I don't know how much enzyme content is normal and what a reduction would have to be to interfere with that polymer size reduction.
But, the chemistry I provided is accurate.

LizBeth

(9,952 posts)
17. Fascinating. Awesome. Thank you. I think you are on the right track.
Sat Jul 24, 2021, 03:41 PM
Jul 2021

My guess is it is to fast track the banana to product or some kind of person interference of the natural process. But Interesting.

ProfessorGAC

(65,076 posts)
19. Possible
Sat Jul 24, 2021, 03:47 PM
Jul 2021

But, I'm going the other way.
The fast track process is to expose the fruit to an ethylene rich atmosphere for a few hours.
It accelerates the ripening process.
They do that with tomatoes using ethylene oxide and have for years. EO is naturally occurring in tomatoes.
I've worked many times at a site in Colombia where one side of the valley was banana groves.
I noticed over the years fewer & fewer unpicked fruit on the ground. Those unpicked fruit would ripen to rotten & the stream water would run yellow.
I think they started picking earlier, then used the ethylene chamber to ripen for market, because less fruit had time to fall to the ground.
BTW: the other side of the valley was coffee. I saw guys picking beans many times. You can have that job!

yonder

(9,666 posts)
24. Not really related to your thread but...
Sat Jul 24, 2021, 04:07 PM
Jul 2021

...I recently read that ripe bananas have more fiber than green ones - not sure why that would be the case.

Hekate

(90,714 posts)
25. They're all picked green for longer life while shipping, but sometimes there are ones so green...
Sat Jul 24, 2021, 04:10 PM
Jul 2021

…it may be they’ll never ripen properly.

If this is a problem for you, store your bananas in a paper bag with an apple in it. The apple helps ripen them — I don’t remember why, but it does.

rurallib

(62,423 posts)
30. Could they have accidentally been frozen?
Sat Jul 24, 2021, 06:30 PM
Jul 2021

I have had some bananas that were frozen and then put into warmth and they were pretty bad.

Wouldn't think this might happen this time of year, but processors are doing lots of strange things to shorten or extend shelf life.

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