If you have bananas that have not ripened yet, the best thing to do is leave them for a few days until they have a couple of brown spots on the skin; rather than the greeny yellow colour.
If you eat them before they have ripened they will not taste so nice...kind of sour D:
Fertilization: Their rapid growth rate make bananas heavy feeders. During warm weather, apply a balanced fertilizer once a month--a 8:10:8 NPK fertilizer appears to be adequate. A mature plant may require as much as 1-1/2 to 2 pounds of the above fertilizer each month. Young plants need a quarter to a third as much. Spread the fertilizer evenly around the plant in a circle extending 4 - 8 feet from the trunk. Do not allow the fertilizer to come in contact with the trunk. Feed container container plants on the same monthly schedule using about half the rate for outside plants.
Frost Protection: Bananas flourish best under uniformly warm conditions but can survive 28° F for short periods. If the temperature does not fall below 22° F and the cold period is short, the underground rhizome will usually survive. To keep the plants that are above ground producing, protection against low temperatures is very important. Wrap trunk or cover with blanket if the plants are small and low temperatures are predicted.
Pruning Only one primary stem of each rhizome should be allowed to fruit. All excess shoots should be removed as soon as they are noticed. This helps channel all of of the plant's energy into fruit production. Once the main stalk is 6 - 8 months old, permit one sucker to develop as a replacement stalk for the following season. When the fruit is harvested, cut the fruiting stalk back to 30 inches above the ground. Remove the stub several weeks later. The stalk can be cut into small pieces and used as mulch.
Propagation: Propagation of bananas is done with rhizomes called suckers or pups. Very small pups are called buttons. Large suckers are the preferred planting material. These are removed from vigorous clumps with a spade when at least three feet tall, during warm months. Pups should not be taken until a clump has at least three to four large plants to anchor it. When the pup is taken the cut must be into the mother plant enough to obtain some roots. Plant close to the surface. Large leaves are cut off of the pup leaving only the youngest leaves or no leaves at all. Some nurseries supply banana plants as container grown suckers.
Pests and Diseases: Bananas have few troublesome pests or diseases outside the tropics. Root rot from cold wet soil is by far the biggest killer of banana plants in our latitudes. California is extremely fortunate in not having nematodes that are injurious to the banana. Gophers topple them, and snails and earwigs will crawl up to where they can get continuous water, but these pests do not bother the plant.
Fruit Harvest: Stalks of bananas are usually formed in the late summer and then winter over. In March they begin "plumping up" and may ripen in April. Occasionally, a stalk will form in early summer and ripen before cold weather appears. The fruit can be harvested by cutting the stalk when the bananas are plump but green. For tree-ripened fruit, cut one hand at a time as it ripens. If latter is done, check stalk daily as rodents can eat the insides of every banana, from above, and the stalk will look untouched. Once harvested the stalk should be hung in a cool, shady place. Since ethylene helps initiate and stimulate ripening, and mature fruit gives off this gas in small amounts, ripening can be hastened by covering the bunch with a plastic bag. Plantains are starchy types that are cooked before eating.
Place the green bananas in a paper bag with an apple and close the bag. They will ripen overnight.
Leave it sitting out on the counter, but pull them apart from the bunch. It will slow down the process and your bananas will not turn brown as fast.
what you do is stick the banana in a paper bag with an apple. the next day it should be ripe.
put them inside a plastic back for 2 days that will help!
Put them in a paper bag for a day or two.
The warmer it is , the faster they ripen
Bannas ripen when you dont eat it for a couple
I waited for the banana to ripen before eating it.
Banana plant have them. Ripen banana do not have much
u go bananas
A banana will ripen (and go bad) faster than an apple, and last would be a lemon.
Having the banana in a plastic bag at room temperature will ripen it sooner than placing it in the refrigerator.
H2o, leave the banana in a bowl for a couple of days.
Pears ripen pretty quickly, but if you put in a bag with a banana or an apple the gases from these fruits will make the pear ripen quicker.
Kalburo is a chemical used to ripen the banana and mango fruits.
Bananas are green until they ripen. Then they are yellow.
Other fruits will not be damaged if placed in a bag with a banana. However, other fruits will ripen faster when placed in a paper bag with a banana. Some may ripen so fast that they spoil.