V0043050 Plantain trees (Musa x paradisiaca) and coconut palms (Cocos

The Incredible Edible Plantain

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Most people (in North America, where I live, anyway) think of the plantain as a kind of banana, only bigger and not as tasty of a fruit. But, while the plantain is a relative of the banana, it is, in fact, not a fruit at all. The incredible edible Plantain is an herb, and so is a banana.

What? You say? These giant “trees” (they grow to heights of over 30 feet) are really overgrown herb plants?

V0043050 Plantain trees (Musa x paradisiaca) and coconut palms (Cocos

Yep.

In doing my study for this article, I came across quite a number of little-known and interesting facts about plantains, a member of the Plantaginaceae family. Allow me list some things you may not know about:

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hanging baobabs

The Best Ever Superfruit – Baobab!

In my never ending search for unique, exotic, and little known foods from ethnic cultures around the world, I stumbled onto this amazing fruit that grows on the majestic, indigenous to North Africa, Baobab Tree.

boabab tree

The Baobab tree (common name for the 9 species of trees in the genus Adansonia) looks like a giant, standing alone, high above the shrubbery in vast plains. And they are, indeed, very large trees. Adansonias often attain heights of nearly 100 feet and the diameters of their monolithic trunks will grow as large as 36 feet.

Immensely popular in Africa, particularly in the northern regions, Baobab fruit has been the planet’s “best kept secret”, when it comes to healthy foods, for centuries. I did some Google searches for keywords such as:

“top 10 superfruits list”
“best ever superfruit”
“top 20 superfruits”
“most nutritious superfruit”

And never, on the first or second page of Google ranked sites, did I find the Baobab fruit even so much as mentioned – let alone counted as a “top 10 or 20”. If you keep digging, yes, you will find that Baobab is starting to become recognized as a fruit so nutritious, and so chocked full of goodness, that forward-thinking Western nutritionists and health dieticians are heralding it as the true Queen, the absolute best ever superfruit in the world.1 baobab


Africans have, of course, known this and been nourished by the Baobab fruit for centuries – probably millennia. Way before modern day scientific scrutiny could analyze foods and their nutritional and health values, North Africans had pragmatic evidence of the many benefits baobab fruit delivers to the human body.

They have, since antiquity, eaten the fruit raw, and have utilized it in juiced form, and also dried and powdered, taking the dehydrated flesh pellets and grinding them into a powder with a mortar and pestle.

boabab fruitmashing boabab

Here are some enlightening facts about Baobab (pronounced, “bay-oh-bab”):

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Bell-Peppers

Little Known Facts About Bell Peppers

Today’s post is focusing on, and celebrating the many benefits of, the amazing sweet bell peppers. There are many little known facts about bell peppers, and we’ll be getting into those in depth, too.

Bell-Peppers

Many people are unaware of the long list of health benefits bell peppers have, and I will get into that in depth a little later. But first, here are some fun facts you may not know about them:

While most people consider peppers as a vegetable, they are, in fact, fruits. They grow on flowering plants and have seeds, thus making them a part of the fruit family.

And get this – bell peppers have sex!

Yes, you read that correctly, there are male and female bell peppers. If you turn them upside down, look at how many lobes they have.

bell peppers gender

The peppers with three lobes are male, and the females will have four.

Split_bell_pepperFemale peppers are full of seeds, much more so than the male, and are the sweeter of the two. They are best eaten raw, as in salads or finger food appetizers, also good in stir fry dishes. The males have far less seeds, and are not as sweet, making them better for use in baked dishes.

You can buy red, orange and yellow bell peppers, but in reality all bell peppers are green to begin with. They change color, progressing from green, to yellow, to orange, and finally red the longer they ripen. Yes, horticulture has produced seeds for each of the various colors of bell peppers, and those peppers will turn the desired color faster, but in essence all bell peppers are green in origin. You don’t have to buy “red” bell pepper seeds to grow them. Plant green bell pepper seeds and just let them ripen until they turn red.

The longer bell peppers ripen, the sweeter they get. So, red bell peppers are the sweetest tasting.

In the USA, green bell peppers are the most popular for use in meal entrees, but the other colors of bell peppers are considered desirable for salads and for adding appealing color to many dishes.

“Capsicum Annum” is the scientific name for bell peppers, and in Australia they are called capsicums.


Historians generally agree that Christopher Columbus and Spanish Conquistadors gave peppers their name.

columbusspanish conquistadors

Columbus was in search of peppercorn plants to produce black pepper and, while in the Americas, he gathered seeds from a wide variety of pepper shrubs indigenous to America. Columbus took the seeds back with him to Europe, where they were successfully cultivated, and soon became immensely popular for use as a spice as well as a food and an ingredient in many dishes.

With the Spanish and English colonization of African countries, the bell pepper was brought to that continent, where it also gained favoritism among Africans as a splendid food item. The bell pepper also made its way into the Asian countries, where it again became popular and a prominent inclusion in Asian meals.

In the United States, most of the bell peppers sold in stores are grown in Florida, with Texas, California, North Carolina also contributing a fair share. Northern states, like Michigan and Wisconsin, also grow bell peppers, but because pepper plants are only productive in very warm to hot climates, they are a seasonal plant, grown only during late June through September—with the exception, of course, of peppers grown in greenhouses.

The Many Health Benefits of Bell Peppers:

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