banana anatomy

when peeling a banana, i usually end-up with three bits:

  • the skin
  • the fleshy, banana-ey bit
  • the little stubby bit of banana flesh which pulls out / breaks off of one end of the banana; it’s harder than normal, and often has a small thread dangling from it; a sort of interior stalk, i suppose.

can someone tell me please, what is the accepted name for this bit of a banana?

Comments

9 responses to “banana anatomy”

  1. Gene
    re: banana anatomy

    are you talking about the pseudostem? you do know that (technically) the banana is a berry, right?

    http http://www.lokvani.com/lokvani/article.php?article_id=847

    I Google’d for http http://www.google.com/search?q=banana+peel+pulp+stalk

  2. Jim
    re: banana anatomy

    Ah, I’d read it was the phloem bundles; google for banana+peel+string.

    Going to Cropready this year?

  3. alecm
    re: banana anatomy

    that’s the plan.

  4. arnold
    re: banana anatomy

    Steady on!

    Since when did a berry have phloem bundles?

    Come on now! You can do better than that!

  5. Vincent
    re: banana anatomy

    Apparently, these bits are known as “fibrovascular bundles”.

    Information courtesy of a Welshman, so please take it with a pinch of salt.

  6. Mike Kay

    This is what I found using the information posted here already: “fibrovascular bundles”-a unit strand of the vascular system in stems and leaves of higher plants consisting essentially of xylem and phloem. To two of the answers were correct, although one was spelled wrong.

  7. Robert

    It’s the seed

  8. Bananana

    I think the pholem bundles are the strings that you’ll get while peeling, that come from inside the skin of the banana. i think what the OP refers to is the “softer” strings that lie between the peel and the edible part.

  9. Bryce

    I have wondered the same thing and I have asked a lot of people. The answer: is it is the distil pistil.
    it has other names too, it’s called banana cardboard, and also the banana vitamin.
    It has 70% of all the potassium of the banana, and a motherload of other nutrients. Some sources say it has only 40% of the potassium of the banana, either way it’s enough that it should be included in our diet.
    hope this helps.

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