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Bananas in savory dishes


_john

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I have had a few savory dishes that included bananas (not plantains) as an ingredient. The most notable was a smoked pork chop with a salty/spicy banana chutney. This got me wondering about other possible uses for bananas.

I went home, peeled a banana, sprinkled it with a very small amount of kosher salt, and ate it with a fork. It was amazing! A whole new experience. I would recommend anyone to try it.

Have you had any encounters with savory bananas? ideas for use in savory dishes?

Edited by _john (log)
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Huevos Motulenos (an egg dish from the Yucatan) was surprisingly delicious to me the first time I had it.

The version I've had at Cafe Pasqual's in Santa Fe has fried eggs on top of black beans, green chile sauce and corn tortillas. Along side are served sauteed bananas, cooked green peas, feta cheese (as a sub for fresh Mexcian cheese), and garnishes of salsa fresca and cilantro. The flavors really come together and the banana really makes it.

Bayless also has a version of the dish in "Mexican Kitchen".

"Under the dusty almond trees, ... stalls were set up which sold banana liquor, rolls, blood puddings, chopped fried meat, meat pies, sausage, yucca breads, crullers, buns, corn breads, puff pastes, longanizas, tripes, coconut nougats, rum toddies, along with all sorts of trifles, gewgaws, trinkets, and knickknacks, and cockfights and lottery tickets."

-- Gabriel Garcia Marquez, 1962 "Big Mama's Funeral"

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My mom used to make "babootie" an African dish with ground lamb, some tomato sauce apricots and bananas. I have no idea where she found the recipe, but it is SOOO good. And I usually beleive that bananas should only be eaten raw, on their own, no messing with them...

Do you suffer from Acute Culinary Syndrome? Maybe it's time to get help...

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There's a really delicious brand of Banana Ketchup that's sweet and spicy, but definitely meant for savory applications. It's either from the Philippines or Indonesia, I can't remember. I like it much better than tomato ketchup myself, which I find far too sweet. The banana ketchup is amazing on French fries! I'll see if I can find out the name of the brand of ketchup and a picture of a bottle.

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We used to have a dish in Papua New Guinea that was vegetables (potato, sweet potato, carrot and onion) as well as chokos cooked with chicken pieces in coconut milk with big hunks of banana cooked into it (apparently it helped thicken it). It had a curry undertone so must have had some curry powder in there somewhere (I never made it, but ate it often at the houses of people who had lived there for quite some time).

Was sort of like a really coconut milky massaman (delicious).

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There's a really delicious brand of Banana Ketchup that's sweet and spicy, but definitely meant for savory applications.  It's either from the Philippines or Indonesia, I can't remember.  I like it much better than tomato ketchup myself, which I find far too sweet.  The banana ketchup is amazing on French fries! I'll see if I can find out the name of the brand of ketchup and a picture of a bottle.

That is called Jufran if I recall correctly. good stuff.

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I would think that banana could be paired with chiles quite easily, just like most sweet tropical fruits.

Recipesource has a recipe for banana catsup. I've never tried it, but it looks vaguely reasonable. I think I'd at least triple the cayenne, but I'm a borderline chile-head.

I always attempt to have the ratio of my intelligence to weight ratio be greater than one. But, I am from the midwest. I am sure you can now understand my life's conundrum.

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As a rule I don't care for hot bananas but the Huevos Motuleños looks as if it would be something I would enjoy. Will check the Bayless recipe.

My favorite savory banana dish is Banana Raita. The creamy yogurt and banana with toasted, crushed black mustard is excellent.

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^ There is an excellent asian style braised lamb recipe HERE which uses bananas as a flavour ingredient. It is excellent and once the lamb is done you blend the bananas into the sauce and reduce (till sexy). Really good!

"There are two things every chef needs in the kitchen: fish sauce and duck fat" - Tony Minichiello

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As a rule I don't care for hot bananas but the Huevos Motuleños looks as if it would be something I would enjoy. Will check the Bayless recipe.

My favorite savory banana dish is Banana Raita. The creamy yogurt and banana with toasted, crushed black mustard is excellent.

Thanks for mentioning the Banana Raita; sounds interesting.

I just glanced at the Bayless version of Huevos Motulenos and it does look very promising--and probably closer to versions in the Yucatan-- tomato-habanero sauce, fried plantains (or bananas), fried beans, ham, peas, Mexican queso fresca and corn tortillas--with the eggs.

I've made the Bayless' recipe for the simmered tomato-habanero many times and it is simple to make and very good! (wonderful for enchiladas)

"Under the dusty almond trees, ... stalls were set up which sold banana liquor, rolls, blood puddings, chopped fried meat, meat pies, sausage, yucca breads, crullers, buns, corn breads, puff pastes, longanizas, tripes, coconut nougats, rum toddies, along with all sorts of trifles, gewgaws, trinkets, and knickknacks, and cockfights and lottery tickets."

-- Gabriel Garcia Marquez, 1962 "Big Mama's Funeral"

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I would think that banana could be paired with chiles quite easily, just like most sweet tropical fruits.

Recipesource has a recipe for banana catsup.  I've never tried it, but it looks vaguely reasonable.  I think I'd at least triple the cayenne, but I'm a borderline chile-head.

I saw an old Trader Vic recipe that called for bananas and yams, but it needed something so I added a little habanero and made it savory. I don't generally use habs, but the sweet bananas and yams needed something to beat them down.

My recipe calls for finishing in the BBQ pit, well, because that's just who I am, but it's fine in the oven.

Yams, Bananas and Habs

This idea comes from an old island recipe. I added the habanero, because the taste was just a little flat without it. There’s no such thing as a flat dish with habanero. Be very careful when handling habaneros. I wear rubber gloves.

4 medium yams, peeled and quartered

2 tablespoons olive oil

1 medium onion, chopped

2 cloves garlic, crushed

1 habanero chile, seeded, deveined and minced (you may want to use only 1/2 of the habanero because they are very hot)

4 large bananas, peeled and sliced

4 tablespoons butter, cut in to small pieces

1 tablespoon salt

1 teaspoon coarsely ground black pepper

Prepare the cooker indirect at 325, using apple wood for flavor. In a kettle of boiling salted water, cook the yams until tender, about 15 minutes. Drain and reserve. In a big skillet over medium heat, add the oil. When it’s hot, add the onion and sauté for about 5 minutes, or until soft. Add the garlic and the habanero, cook for 2 minutes. Add the bananas, cook for 3 minutes. Add the yams, butter, salt and pepper. Toss everything well to coat. Cook for another 5 minutes, mashing the yams and bananas and mixing everything together. Transfer to a foil pan. Place in the cooker for one hour. Remove and serve.

Yield: 6 to 8 servings

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There's a really delicious brand of Banana Ketchup that's sweet and spicy, but definitely meant for savory applications.  It's either from the Philippines or Indonesia, I can't remember.  I like it much better than tomato ketchup myself, which I find far too sweet.  The banana ketchup is amazing on French fries! I'll see if I can find out the name of the brand of ketchup and a picture of a bottle.

I believe you're thinking of either Mafran, Del Monte or the most commonly known Jufran Banana Sauce which is available in both regular and hot varieties. Horrendously addictive stuff!

Joie Alvaro Kent

"I like rice. Rice is great if you're hungry and want 2,000 of something." ~ Mitch Hedberg

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I worked at a place where we had a dish called Sole Caprice, which was basically sole meuniere which was finished with almonds, sliced bananas, butter, parsley and a squeeze of lemon. It was probably ripped off from the first Four Seasons Cookbook, sold really well.

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I've seen this recipe for Banana-Black Bean Empanadas lying on a desk at work. Thought it sounded nasty, but I was intrigued and made it anyway. They weren't nasty. I've made them many times since.

and at Citrus, a restaurant on the Upper West Side in NYC, they have a spicy tuna-banana roll. Again, I couldn't imagine how that could possibly be any good, but it was delicious and I get it every time I'm there.

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Peohe's on Coronado, across the bay from San Diego, serves a Halibut Mai'a. It's a halibut filet sautéed with macadamia nuts, bananas and Frangelico. It's quite good.

Anyone else remember Nero W's "One of Each Soup" recipe that she posted in the "52 1/2 Weeks, 53 Soups, A New Years Resolution I Can Keep"? It included a banana, too, and was also very good.

 

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Brian: Peter, those are Cheerios.”

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Crescent Dragonwagon's cookbook has a recipe for a salad that includes sliced roasted beet, sliced orange, and sliced red onion, with mixed field greens and a mango vinagrette with small banana dice included at the end. As Dragonwagon notes, she was sceptical of banana and onion, but it goes well.

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Toliver:

halibut filet sautéed with macadamia nuts, bananas and Frangelico

I like bananas with fish too, though usually stuffed with a kind of quick hash of onion, red peppers and chilis, and banana, and then baked.

A flatmate used to sautee onions, then add spinach and banana. That was surprisingly good.

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