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A Wine and Homebrew Supply Store
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This
is the Dwarf Orinoco variety. The Orinoco Banana tree was commonly
grown in California for years as a landscape plant. Grows to 16 feet, more
cold hardy than any other. 15 to 18 months from planting to harvest.
Flavor is good, texture is less than perfect, but when properly grown and
cultivated it can produce enormous stalks of fruit. Excellent
in banana bread. Sometimes called horse, hog or burro banana, it can be
purchased at most nurseries.
Growth
Habit:
Bananas are fast-growing herbaceous perennials arising from underground
rhizomes. The fleshy stalks or pseudostems
formed
by upright concentric layers of leaf sheaths constitute the functional trunks.
The true stem begins as an underground corm which grows upwards, pushing its way
out through the center of the stalk 10-15 months after planting, eventually
producing the terminal inflorescence which will later bear the fruit. Each
stalk produces one huge flower cluster and then dies. New stalks then grow
from the rhizome. Banana plants are extremely decorative, ranking next to palm
trees for the tropical feeling they lend to the landscape.
Foliage:
The large oblong or elliptic leaf blades are extensions of the sheaths of the pseudostem
and are joined to them by fleshy, deeply grooved, short petioles. The leaves
unfurl, as the plant grows, at the rate of one per week in warm weather, and
extend upward and span outward , becoming as much
as 9 feet long and 2 feet wide. They may be entirely green, green with
maroon splotches, or green on the upper side and red-purple beneath. The leaf
veins run from the mid-rib straight to the outer edge of the leaf. Even when the
wind shreds the leaf, the veins are still able to function. Approximately 44 leaves
will appear before the inflorescence. Flowers:
The banana inflorescence shooting out from the heart in the tip of the stem, is
at first a large, long-oval, tapering, purple-clad bud. As it opens, the slim,
nectar-rich, tubular, toothed, white flowers appear. They are clustered in
whorled double rows along the the
floral stalk, each cluster covered by a thick, waxy, hood like bract, purple
outside and deep red within. The flowers occupying the first 5 - 15 rows
are female. As the rachis of the inflorescence continues to elongate, sterile
flowers with abortive male and female parts appear, followed by normal staminate
ones with abortive ovaries. The two latter flower types eventually drop in most
edible bananas. Fruits: The ovaries contained in the first (female) flowers grow rapidly, developing parthenocarpically (without pollination) into clusters of fruits, called hands. The number of hands varies with the species and variety. The fruit (technically a berry) turns from deep green to yellow or red, and may range from 2-1/2 to 12 inches in length and 3/4 to 2 inches in width. The flesh, ivory-white to yellow or salmon-yellow, may be firm, astringent, even gummy with latex when unripe, turning tender and slippery, or soft and mellow or rather dry and mealy or starchy when ripe. The flavor may be mild and sweet or subacid with a distinct apple tone. The common cultivated types are generally seedless with just vestiges of ovules visible as brown specks. Occasionally, cross-pollination with wild types will result in a number of seeds in a normally seedless variety.
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Send mail to Dr. Dan The brewman@thebrewshack.com with
questions or comments.
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