By Carol Felixson
"Mary Mary quite contrary, how does your garden grow?
With silver bells and cockle shells and….hands with yellow fingers all in
a row." WHAT???? Hands with yellow fingers???
Sure… they are BANANAS! They taste good and supply us with vitamin C,
potassium, and other vitamins and minerals. Monkeys and tropical birds
like parrots and toucans eat them too. When they fall to the ground and
get smooshy,
everybody
eats them from bugs to small animals.
The word "banana" is one of 500 names used for the
seedless fruits that belong to the musaceae (banana) plant family and
refers to the sweet forms with yellow skin. The word "plantain" is used to
refer to the green or red skinned cooking bananas.
Did you know the banana "tree" is not really a tree at
all since it doesn’t have any wood fiber? It is a big herb whose "trunk"
is made from the overlapping bases of its leaves. The fruit or fingers of
a banana are actually berries with a thick outer skin and are formed in
layers called hands made of 10-20 bananas each.
Bananas are used in many ways. The leaves themselves can
be used as placemats, serving platters, or decorations. You can eat
bananas by themselves or slice and add them to hot and cold cereal. They
can be a part of chicken, fish, vegetable, or fruit dishes. Or used in
homemade desserts, especially on a hot fudge sundae! What is YOUR favorite
way of eating bananas?
To see hands with yellow fingers and approximately
5,000 other species of tropical and sub-tropical plants, visit the Mildred
E. Mathias Botanical Garden at UCLA in the heart of Westwood. To learn
more about the garden call 310 825-1260.