This Week's Mystery Plant | Dr. John B. Nelson Curator, USC Herbarium |
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We have no bananas today, but we have something very, very similar: something that brings us a very decidedly Latin American addition to our menus. These fruits are indeed closely related to the banana of commerce, but they represent a different variety of the same hybrid plant, from which both come. Our Mystery Plant is now a staple of many diets throughout Latin America, providing an easily marketed and economical carbohydrate source, one loaded with vitamins and minerals. It is widely consumed in Mexico, Central America, South America, and the Caribbean, and is becoming more and more popular here in the USA, easy to find in supermarkets with well-stocked produce departments. My brother-in-law, Carlos Anrrich, was born in Cuba, where he spent his early years. Carlos tells me that this plant's Cuban name is "platano," which is similar to the English name for it. Platano was enormously versatile as a menu item in the Anrrich household, somewhat rivaling shrimp as a menu item (remember Bubba's discourse in Forrest Gump?). Platanos could appear as an appetizer, in a main course, and in desserts, and is still known as a prominent feature of Cuban cuisine. They are larger and heavier than bananas, and generally with ridges on the tough skin. They may be cooked while unripe and green, or ripe, when yellow. (Some recipes call for the ripest fruits, used after the skins turn black. That's when the platano is the sweetest.) Carlos recommends them--for a snack--as "mariquitas": very thinly sliced into flat sections, then fried and salted. With a dipping sauce of olive oil, garlic, and lime juice, it's an appetizer that can't be beat. Or, for a main dish, try them as "platanos a puņetazos", in which thickly sliced sections of the green fruits are lightly fried and drained, then mashed or "punched" with the palm of the hand, before being returned to the skillet a second time and fried to crispness. Lightly salted, they make a terrific side dish with roast pork. A tempting dessert? Bake ripe, firm fruits with brown sugar, cinnamon, and some orange juice for "platanos en tentacion." All of these are marvelous textures and flavors that really stick with you. You'll be saying "Platanos maduros, peo seguros!" (Photo by John Nelson.) |
Photo by John Nelson |