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I am searching for a ways to preserve the banana, and most of the time they said that I need to wrap the stems in a plastic or scotch tape so the gas wont come, they said that this gas is the reason why banana ripens fast.

I am thinking that maybe by separating each bananas then cutting the stem of each one of them instead of wrapping them will effectively preserve the bananas? It is very time consuming to wrap each one of the stem.

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6 Answers 6

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From what I understand, ethylene gas is released at the stem. This causes fruit to ripen quicker. That's why you'd want to wrap the stem. If you separate them, you'd still need to wrap each one individually as gas is released there. There might be some additional benefit to separating it as, you can allow each banana to ripen at it's own rate. But if that's too time consuming, just wrap the whole bunch at once will offer some benefit. I can't imagine that taking more than a few seconds?

Cutting the stems, I imagine would only serve to speed that process up.

http://www.instructables.com/id/Keep-Bananas-Fresh-Longer-slices-too/?ALLSTEPS

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I eat a ton of bananas and was excited when I heard about this...but it’s a total lie. I did it for 2 weeks (2 bunches) and saw no difference. So, I did an experiment. I did 2 with and 2 without...then took a pic...then left them untouched on my counter for 4 days. Then took another pic. The ones wrapped looked EXACTLY the same as the ones with no wrap. Both equally spotted and soft. No preserving what so ever! I’m going back to using the “green bags”. They don’t work great but definitely better than doing the “plastic stem wrap”. I don’t see an option to attach the pics here but I’ll find another site that I can.

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  • You'll be able to include images & links once your reputation is high enough (after you've given some good answers or asked questions that people voted up). It helps to keep down on the amount of abuse that griefers can cause.
    – Joe
    Commented Feb 11, 2019 at 21:28
  • Oh ... but it's possible that your answer would've been better over at cooking.stackexchange.com/q/50453/67 ... but then again, you get some people who downvote saying that you should've left a comment to agree with someone with a similar answer (even though you're not allowed to comment yet, either)
    – Joe
    Commented Feb 11, 2019 at 21:30
  • Note that this isn't a valid test. The stem releases a gas. If you put the wrapped bananas next to the unwrapped bananas on the counter, the gas from the unwrapped bananas would ripen the wrapped bananas. To test this, you'd want to put the bananas into two separate containers so that they don't cross-ripen. Of course, putting bananas into containers would itself cause them to ripen faster, but we're looking for different speeds.
    – mdfst13
    Commented Nov 18 at 1:27
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It's very likely that any benefit gained by doing this will be completely destroyed by the act of cutting into the protective skin of the fruit. Once you do this, you're exposing the interior skin and the fruit itself to microbes in the air, which will be more than happy to colonize and eat away (i.e. rot) the banana you were trying to preserve.

If you find it too time-consuming to wrap their stems to extend shelf life, you could seek out less ripe bananas so it takes longer for them to ripen, or buy smaller batches that you can eat in a shorter time so there's no need for preservation.

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Too-quick ripening is generally more of a problem in the summer. If you happen to use a fan, putting the bananas in front of or behind the fan will blow the ethylene gas away before it can accelerate ripening. Or even just in the path of an AC vent.

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I separate them and dip each end in melted wax. Seems to make a difference. I have a photo but don’t know how to add it.

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  • Welcome Mike - the photo can be added by using the toolbar above the answer text box. The icon to click is immediately to the right of the curly brackets/braces {} icon and looks like a landscape with mountains and a sun/moon in the top left corner. This should give you a dropdown box that allows you to browse (click on the word browse), drag and drop or paste the image into the text. You can use the edit function on your answer here to add the photo.
    – bob1
    Commented Jul 2 at 21:06
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I cut off the stems about 1/2" above the banana fruit and it definitely helps. I would say it adds about 2 maybe 3 days slowing down the ripening.

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