Yes green plantains taste like sweet plantains
Sweet potatoes, as the name implies, taste like potatoes only sweeter. They are yellow or orange inside, and are roots while potatoes are stems.
Plantains. They are bigger than bananas but look the same and when cooked, they can be made as sweet mushy plantains or they can be made as tostones, which are fried and harder with salt.
A large green banana
Leeks taste like a mild, sweet onion. Even more mild than a shallot (not the green onion shallot but the gourmet onion)
Plantains are firmer and have a lower sugar content than bananas. Also, plantains are starchy and can be cooked and eaten like a potato when unripe (green). When overripe, plantains are sweet. Bananas are mostly eaten raw and are much sweeter. According to Wikipedia: "There is no formal botanical distinction between bananas and plantains, and the use of either term is based purely on how the fruits are consumed."
Plantains are a banana like fruit. Also mini or sweet bananas. Plantains are much like a banana, but are firmer and usually cooked into recipes rather than eaten raw, like bananas.
Jam pasties are a sweet alternative to a cheese and onion pastie. thay taste quite nice, that is if the jam issnt green.
They taste tart, somewhat like tomatoes but less sweet.
They taste like sweet tarts! litterally
I am about to find out! Personally I've done it a few times. I've never tried it with a green plantain as they are starchy and more like a potato, but I've had great results with ripe plantains. My recipe calls for 3 medium cavendish bananas, but I usually use 1 decent sized plantain and 1 regular cavendish banana. You may want to lessen the sugar you add slightly though, as the plantains seem to be sweeter than a typical banana when ripe (of course this might just be my taste). Good luck
Lactulose has an overly sweet taste but does not taste like coconut.
Pea is a green vegetable that grows above ground on small plant in a green pod much like that of green beans. Semi sweet in taste. Very good and healthy.