going bananas

A few fas­ci­nat­ing things I’ve learned from Dan Koeppel’s op-ed, “Yes, We Will Have No Bananas”:

  • Bananas travel thou­sands of miles, rather than hun­dreds, and spoil in weeks, rather than months, yet they cost half as much as apples.
  • Amer­i­cans eat as many bananas as apples and oranges combined.
  • Bananas became pop­u­lar in North Amer­ica only after aggres­sive marketing.
  • Despite the exis­tence of more than 1,000 vari­eties, bananas in the US are all the same: the Cavendish.
  • The Cavendish is infe­rior in taste to the banana our great-grandparents ate.
  • Reliance on a sin­gle vari­ety of banana will even­tu­ally result in another wide­spread crop destruc­tion due to disease.

Bananas in Egypt were different—and grown locally along the Nile, no less. Now I feel guilty for call­ing them “weird bananas.”

Read­ers of food lit­er­a­ture are famil­iar with the dan­gers of mono­cul­ture. It’s a shame that the industrial-age tech­niques we devel­oped to make food cheap and acces­si­ble to every­one have also brought us infe­rior taste, reduced nutri­tional value, and increased sus­cep­ti­bil­ity to disaster.

4 Comments

  1. Foonyor July 8, 2008

    Luck­ily I hate both the taste and con­sis­tency of bananas! Death to bananas!

  2. MRhé July 8, 2008

    Bananas are America’s most pop­u­lar hand fruit!

  3. AnnaK. July 8, 2008

    I already enjoy bananas, so I can only imag­ine how deli­cious the super­banana pre­de­ces­sors must have been.

  4. shazam July 10, 2008

    I saw that op/ed, too.  Actu­ally, though, if you want the true author­i­ta­tive book on bananas, envi­ron­men­tal change, United Fruit, and US-Honduran rela­tions, you need to read John Soluri’s amaz­ing bit of schol­ar­ship, Banana Cul­tures.  It’s one of the best books I’ve read for pre­lims, for sure, and is really quite an engag­ing read for an aca­d­e­mic book.  Soluri brings in more of the trop­i­cal med­i­cine and labor his­tory stuff, I think, as well as the envi­ron­men­tal change aspects as they relate to dis­ease.  There are so many fas­ci­nat­ing sto­ries to be told about the rela­tion­ship between plant health and human health, par­tic­u­larly as they relate to agri­cul­ture!  We’re really only begin­ning to scratch the sur­face of this area, academically.

    Another amaz­ing read along this vein is Dou­glas Sackman’s Orange Empire, also one of the more amaz­ing works of envi­ron­men­tal his­tory I’ve read lately.  He man­ages to bring labor his­tory, cul­tural analy­sis, agri­cul­ture, sci­ence, and envi­ron­men­tal his­tory all together in his analy­sis of cit­rus cul­ture in Cal­i­for­nia (another great drama of 19th- and 20th-century agri­cul­ture, food pro­duc­tion, dis­tri­b­u­tion, labor rela­tions, and mar­ket­ing); it’s really an aston­ish­ing book.  If I can write some­thing any­where near as good as either of these guys, I’ll have it made.

Leave a comment

Leave a Comment

July 8, 2008 July 8, 2008 food by Scott [permanent link]