Never miss a recipe!
Enter your email address to subscribe to Harvest to Table free via email:
almanac apples artichoke arugula asparagus basil beans beets best bet varieties blueberries bok choy books broccoli brussels sprouts cabbage carrots cauliflower celery chard cherries chilies Chinese cabbage Chinese leaves compost cooking cool-season vegetables corn cucumbers dates delicious bite delicious bites dried beans eggplant farmers market fennel fresh this week garbanzo bean gardening tips garlic grapefruit grapes herbs horseradish hot peppers how to grow in the garden kale kitchen garden kitchen garden almanac kohlrabi leeks legumes lemon lettuce mandarin orange melons mint mushrooms mustard greens nectarines okra olives onions oranges parsnips peaches pears peas peppers pests and diseases pests diseases problems potatoes pumpkin radish recipes rutabaga salsify seed starting shallots soil Southern Hemisphere spinach spring onions squash strawberry summer squash sun-dried tomato sunchokes sweet corn sweet pepper sweet potato tangerine tomato turnip turnip greens vegetable garden watermelons winter squash zucchini
Categories
- Around Here
- Berries
- Best Bet Varieties
- Bulb Vegetables
- Cereals & Grains
- Citrus Fruits
- Companion Planting
- Container Gardening
- Cooking
- Delicious Bite
- Dried & Candied Fruit, Rhubarb
- Dry Gardening
- Flower Vegetables
- Food For Thought
- Fresh This Week
- Fruit Vegetables
- Fruits
- Gardening Tips
- Harvest and Storage
- Herbs, Spices & Condiments
- How to Grow
- In The Garden
- Indoor Gardening
- Kitchen Garden Almanac
- Leaf Vegetables
- Legumes
- Making A Kitchen Garden
- Melons
- Mushrooms
- Nuts & Seeds
- Pests Diseases Problems
- Polls
- Pome Fleshy Fruits
- Quick Crops
- Recipes
- Root Vegetables
- Season Extension
- Seed Starting
- Southern Hemisphere
- Stalk Vegetables
- Stone Fleshy Fruits
- Storing Vegetables and Fruits
- Tropical Fruits
- Tuber Vegetables
- Vegetables
Measurement Converter
Hardiness Zone Finder
Find your zone by entering your zip code
Favorite Food and Garden Blogs
American Community Gardening Association
Center for Ecoliteracy
Common Ground Garden Los Angeles
Compost Guide
Culinate
Eat Local Challenge
Eat Well Guide
Edible Communities
The Edible Schoolyard
The Ethicurean
Food Routes
The Garden Lady
Gardeners Anonymous
In My Kitchen Garden
Local Harvest
Locavores
Mighty Foods
Mother Earth's Garden
National Gardening Association
Reading Dirt
Seafood Watch
Seeds of Change
Shirls Gardenwatch
Simply Recipes
Slow Food USA
Sonoma County Master Gardeners
Sustainable Table
This Garden Is Illegal
Thoughts on the Table
Veggie Gardening Tips
What to Eat
- « Planning Succession Crops |
- Main
- | Banana »
Harvest to Table
A practical guide to food in the garden and market
Plantains
Filed under: Tropical Fruits, Tagged as: plantain
Plantains have a mild squash-like or potato-like or sweet potato-like flavor with a faint sweetness reminiscent of a banana. Well, you'll have to taste the plantain to decide.
Exactly what flavor you ascribe to the plantain will, no doubt, have something to do with how it's been prepared. The plantain is a fruit--a very close cousin of the banana--that is eaten as a vegetable, except when it's served as a dessert.
Plantains can be chunked and cooked in soups or stews. They can be sliced and fried or mashed like a potato. They can be boiled or sautéed and served as a side dish, and they can be baked in their skins and served as a dessert.The message is clear: the plantain is versatile and can land on either the sweet or savory side of the table.
The plantain is a tropical fruit and a mainstay of tropical and subtropical cuisines. Plantains are commonly eaten in Latin America and the Caribbean. They are also featured in the cookery of Malaysia, West Africa, the Pacific Islands, and India.Plantains look like bananas except that they are longer and thicker. A plantain is ripe when its skin is still green. The flesh of the plantain is firmer and starchier than a banana. The only time an uncooked plantain approaches the sweetness of a banana is when its skin has turned black, still the taste raw will probably be unpleasant.
Most plantains are prepared like potatoes: peeled cut up and boiled or added to stews, steamed and mashed with butter or olive oil, or sliced and fried or deep fried. That is the reason plantains are sometimes called "potatoes of the tropics" or "cooking bananas." Cooked plantains are delicious blended with apples, sweet potatoes, and squash. Boiled they have a soft spongy texture.
Plantains are 10 to 15 inches long and have three or four well-defined sides. The ends of the plantain are clearly tapered unlike the banana. The thick, tough green peel turns black as it ripens. In Latin America green plantains are known as plátanos, partially ripe green and spotted brown plantains are called pintos (painted), and fully ripe black plantains are known as maduros (mature).Maduros is also the name give to fully ripe plantains that have been fried once and served. Tostones is a favorite plantain dish among Latin Americans. The plantains are peeled and cut crosswise about ¾ inch thick, fried in oil until they are lightly cooked, then cooled and smashed flat, and then cooked again in hot oil until they are golden brown and crisp.
Picadillo is a plantain-inspired casserole made with layers of boiled, mashed plantains mixed with eggs, flour, butter, milk and ground cloves that alternate with layers of ground beef fried with tomatoes, onions, and raisins. The alternating layers are topped with cheese and baked to a golden brown.
Plantains do not grow on trees. The plantain is a leafy herbaceous perennial plant that grows from a fleshy underground root known as a rhizome. The plant can grow to 20 feet tall. The plantain, like the banana, is native to Southeast Asia and has been in cultivation for several thousand years.
The word plantain comes from the Latin plantago and planta which means the sole of the foot, the shape of the plant's leaves.
Local season: Plantains come to harvest throughout the year in tropical regions. The fruit is ready for harvest 13 to 15 months after the plant blooms.
Choose: Select plantains that are firm with peels that are free of tears or breaks. A fully ripe plantain will have an almost completely black skin and be soft to the touch. Use ripe plantains for dishes in which they are mashed or quickly cooked. Choose firm, yellow-green skinned plantains for sautéing, deep-frying, or stewing. A black spotted plantain is semi-ripe.
Amount: One pound of plantains will yield 1 cup mashed or 1½ cups sliced fruit.
Store: Ripe plantains can be kept at room temperature for several days uncovered and out of direct sun. Turn them daily. Plantains can be ripened at room temperature. Plantains will keep in the refrigerator for up to 1 week. Plantains will not continue to ripen once refrigerated.
Freeze plantains for 2 to 3 week wrapped the tightly in plastic wrap.
Prepare: To peel a plantain cut off the top and bottom then cut it in half crosswise or make a lengthwise cut through skin down to the flesh on either side of each half and peel back the skin.
Cook: Plantains cook like vegetables retaining their shape and consistency because they are low in sugar and rich in starch. For cooking, choose plantains that are green or yellow with some black spots. Plantains are usually prepared like potatoes: peeled, cut up, and boiled or added to stews, steamed and mashed with butter or olive oil, or sliced and fried or deep fried.
Baking. Place plantain unpeeled on a baking sheet and bake in 400ºF oven until tender when pierced (about 1 hour). Pull back the peel and season to taste with butter, salt, and pepper, and eat from the skin.
Grilling. Place the plantain 4 inches above the heat for about 45 minutes.
Serve: Plantains are most often served cooked.
• Use in soups, stews, and sauces.
• Serve with apples, sweet potatoes, and squash.
• Bake or fry to serve alongside meats or poultry.
• Deep-fry then mash and serve with roasted meats.
• Thin slice and fry to eat as a snack like potato chips.
Flavor partners: Ripe plantains have a flavor affinity for allspice, butter, cinnamon, cloves, coconut, ice cream, rum, and sugar. Starchy unripe plantains have a flavor affinity for bacon, chile peppers, cilantro, cumin, curry, garlic, lime, pork cracklings, salsa, and sour orange.
Nutrition: Plantains are a good source of potassium and phosphorus. A 3-ounce portion of cooked plantain contains about 120 calories.
The botanical name for plantains and cooking bananas is Musa paraisiaca
Never Miss a New Post subscribe to Harvest to Table by entering your email:
Harvest to Table's New Encyclopedia:
The Kitchen Garden Grower's Guide
A practical vegetable and herb garden encyclopedia
The Kitchen Garden Grower's Guide is a how-to guide on planting, growing, and preparing more than eighty vegetables and herbs. This handy home companion is perfect for avid cooks, foodies, and both beginning and expert small scale vegetable gardeners.
Send This Entry To A Friend
Link to this page
Bookmark this page using the following link:
http://www.harvestwizard.com/2009/07/plantains_have_a_mild_squashli.html
Do you have a website?
You can place a link to this page by copying and pasting the code below.
<a href="http://www.harvestwizard.com/2009/07/plantains_have_a_mild_squashli.html">Plantains</a>
Never Miss a Garden Tip!
Just enter your email address and you will subscribe to "Harvest To Table" Web site updates via email for free. Make sure you confirm your subscription from the confirmation message you'll receive in your mailbox right away.
Most Popular
Recent Posts
Recent Comments
- Stephen Albert on How to Grow Lima Beans
- AnnM on How to Grow Lima Beans
- Stephen Albert on How to Grow Lima Beans
- anna on How to Grow Lima Beans
- alex linssey markinmy on How to Grow Lima Beans
- Stephen Albert on How to Grow Lima Beans
- tine on How to Grow Lima Beans
- Anonymous on How to Grow Lima Beans
- Stephen Albert on How to Grow Potatoes
- amy on How to Grow Potatoes
- Durgan on How to Grow Potatoes
- Stephen Albert on How to Grow Potatoes
- Anonymous on How to Grow Potatoes
- Stephen Albert on How to Grow Potatoes
- katrina on How to Grow Potatoes
- Stephen Albert on Vegetable Disease Problem Solver
- charlie b on Vegetable Disease Problem Solver
- Stephen Albert on Vegetable Disease Problem Solver
- james on Vegetable Disease Problem Solver
- Stephen Albert on Vegetable Disease Problem Solver
- james on Vegetable Disease Problem Solver
- Stephen Albert on Vegetable Disease Problem Solver
- Mary Bender on Vegetable Disease Problem Solver
- Stephen Albert on Vegetable Disease Problem Solver
- hugh means on Vegetable Disease Problem Solver
- Stephen Albert on Vegetable Disease Problem Solver
- leongks on Vegetable Disease Problem Solver
- Stephen Albert on How to Grow Celery
- Sandi on How to Grow Celery
- Stephen Albert on How to Grow Celery
- Flo on How to Grow Celery
- Stephen Albert on Melon Growing Problems: Troubleshooting
- John on Melon Growing Problems: Troubleshooting
- Stephen Albert on Beans: Harvest and Storage
- Holly on Beans: Harvest and Storage
- Stephen Albert on Spring Onions, Green Onions and Scallions
- mutuelle on Spring Onions, Green Onions and Scallions
- Stephen Albert on Spring Onions, Green Onions and Scallions
- Sue Parker on Spring Onions, Green Onions and Scallions
- Stephen Albert on Spring Onions, Green Onions and Scallions
- Corinne Whitfield on Spring Onions, Green Onions and Scallions
- Stephen Albert on Spring Onions, Green Onions and Scallions
- mary on Spring Onions, Green Onions and Scallions
- Stephen Albert on Spring Onions, Green Onions and Scallions
- matt on Spring Onions, Green Onions and Scallions
- Stephen Albert on Spring Onions, Green Onions and Scallions
- keith on Spring Onions, Green Onions and Scallions
- Stephen Albert on Spring Onions, Green Onions and Scallions
- Carman on Spring Onions, Green Onions and Scallions
- Stephen Albert on Chinese Vegetables: Warm-Season Varieties
- Trent on Chinese Vegetables: Warm-Season Varieties
- Toleomas on Chinese Vegetables: Warm-Season Varieties
- Stephen Albert on How to Grow Radish
- Kathy on How to Grow Radish
- Stephen Albert on Growing Mint
- Chris and Growing Mint on Growing Mint
Subscribe by RSS


Leave a comment