Banana leaf

The banana leaf is the leaf of the banana plant, which may produce up to 40 leaves in a growing cycle.[1] The leaves have a wide range of applications because they are large, flexible, waterproof and decorative. They are used for cooking, wrapping,[2] and food-serving in a wide range of cuisines in tropical and subtropical areas. They are used for decorative and symbolic purposes in numerous Hindu and Buddhist ceremonies. In traditional homebuilding in tropical areas, roofs and fences are made with dry banana-leaf thatch.[3] Banana and palm leaves were historically the primary writing surfaces in many nations of South and Southeast Asia.

Banana leaf
Carp pepes, carp fish cooked with spices in a banana leaf.
Making of banana leaf plates which replace plastic as a waste solution

Applications in cuisine

Steamed rice wrapped inside banana leaf to enhance its aroma and aesthetic

Banana leaves are large, flexible, and waterproof.[4] They impart an aroma to food that is cooked in or served on them; steaming with banana leaves imparts a subtle sweet flavor and aroma to the dish.[5] The leaves are not themselves eaten and are discarded after the contents are consumed.

Besides adding flavor, the leaves keep juices in and protect food from burning, much as foil does.[6] In Tamil Nadu (India) leaves are fully dried and used as packing material for foodstuffs, and are also made into cups to hold liquids. The dried leaves are called 'Vaazhai-ch- charugu' (வாழைச் சருகு) in Tamil. Some South Indian, Filipino and Khmer recipes use banana leaves as a wrapper for frying. The leaves are later removed. In Vietnamese cuisine, banana leaves are used to wrap foods such as cha-lua.

Worldwide cuisine by country

In Indian cuisine

Food served on a banana leaf in Karnataka, India.

South Indian cuisine & Bengali cuisine is traditionally served on a banana leaf, especially in the states of Andhra Pradesh, Telangana, Tamil Nadu, Karnataka, Kerala, Odisha, West Bengal and also in the Northern and Eastern parts of Sri Lanka. In these regions, it is customary to serve food on a banana leaf during festive occasions, and banana is often a part of the food served. In Maharashtra, on special occasions like Ganesh chaturthi, people eat off banana leaves. The banana leaf is also used for wrapping fish, which can then be steamed.

In Bengali cuisine, banana leaf is used to prepare Paturi, which is marinated and seasoned boneless fresh fish steamed and cooked inside a banana leaf and eaten on it. Commonly, Bhetki and Ilish are used in making Paturi. Also have great significance & believe for having meal on a banana leaf.

In Indonesian cuisine

Chicken satay served in pincuk, a banana leaf cone-shaped plate.
Unwrapped lontong. Different colors depend on the banana leaf which is used as the wrapper.

In Indonesian cuisine, banana leaf is employed in cooking methods called pepes and botok; the banana-leaf packets of food are steamed, boiled, or grilled on charcoal. Banana leaves are also used to wrap several kinds of snacks kue (delicacies), such as nagasari or kue pisang and otak-otak, and also to wrap pressed sticky-rice delicacies such as lemper and lontong.

In Java, banana leaf is also used as a shallow conical bowl called "pincuk", usually to serve rujak tumbuk, pecel or satay. The pincuk secured with lidi semat (small thorn-like pins made from the coconut-leaf midrib). The pincuk fit in the left palm, while the right hand is used to consume the food. It also functions as a traditional disposable take-away food container. The cleaned banana leaf is often used as a placemat; cut banana-leaf sheets placed on rattan, bamboo or clay plates are used to serve food. Decorated and folded banana leaves on woven bamboo plates are used as serving trays, tumpeng rice cones, and holders for jajan pasar or kue delicacies.

In Malaysian and Singaporean cuisine

In Malaysian and Singapore cuisine, banana leaves are used to wrap certain kuih and otak-otak. Malay foods such as nasi lemak are also commonly wrapped with banana leaves before being wrapped with newspaper, as banana leaves add fragrance to the rice.

In Philippine cuisine

Sumang kamoteng kahoy (cassava suman), wrapped in banana leaves.

Banana leaves are the traditional method of serving food in Philippine cuisine, with rice and other dishes laid out on large banana leaves (a salo-salo, reminiscent of a buffet) and everyone partaking using their bare hands (kamayan).[7][8] Another traditional method of serving food is by placing it on a banana-leaf liner placed over a woven bilao (a winnowing basket made of bamboo). The bilao is normally a farm implement used for removing chaff from grains, although there are now smaller woven trays or carved wooden plates of the same kind in Filipino restaurants used specifically for serving food.[9][10] Banana leaves are also commonly used in wrapping food (binalot), and are valued for the aroma they impart to the food.[11] Specific Philippine dishes that use banana leaves include suman and bibingka.[12][13]

In Polynesian cuisine

The Hawaiian imu is often lined with banana leaves.

In Caribbean and Mexican cuisine

Guanimos are Dominican tamales made with cornmeal, stuffed with ground meat and wrapped with banana leaves.

In Puerto Rico pasteles are made primarily with fresh green banana dough stuffed with pork, and then wrapped in banana leaves which have been softened at the fire. Many rice dishes in Puerto Rico are cooked with banana leaves as a lid to add flavor and aroma. Fish and pork shoulder can be wrapped in plantain leaves and baked. Guanimes known as Puerto Rican tamales, cornmeal cooked with coconut milk and other ingredients, are wrapped in banana leaves. Sweet cassava tortillas and Puerto Rican arepas are laid on banana leaves for a few hours before cooking.

Mexican, and more specifically Oaxacan tamales and a local variety of lamb or barbacoa tacos are often steamed in banana leaves. Banana leaves are used for wrapping pork in the traditional Yucatán dish Cochinita pibil.

In Central American cuisine

Nacatamales ready to be steamed

Vigorón' is a traditional Nicaraguan dish. It consists of a cabbage salad known as curtido (chopped cabbage, tomatoes, onions, and chile peppers marinated in vinegar and salt), boiled yuca, and chicharrones (fried pork with skin or with meat), wrapped in Banana leaf.[14] Variations of this dish are also found in Costa Rica.

Vaho (or Baho) is a mix of meat, green plantains and yuca cooked in banana leaves.

Traditional Nicaraguan Vajo

Tamales made throughout Central America are traditionally wrapped in banana leaves prior to cooking, which imparts a distinctive taste to the nixtamalized corn dough.

Nacatamal is made up mostly of nixtamalized corn masa (a kind of dough traditionally made from a process called nizquezar) and lard, but also includes seasonings such as salt and achiote (annatto). Filling consists of seasoned pork meat, rice, a slice of potato, bell pepper, tomato, onion, olives, cilantro and/or spearmint sprigs, and on occasion, though less commonly, capers, raisins or fresh chile (red or green), all wrapped in banana leaves. This dish is traditional to Nicaragua.

In Ecuadorian cuisine

Coast side region prepare dishes as Bollo, green plantain and peanut butter batter filled with fish or pork wrapped in a banana leaf, this is then baked in a brick oven or steamed. Manabi province prepare a dish called Tonga a chicken stew with rice dyed with achiote and peanut salsa, all this served on a banana leaf and then wrapped. Amazonian provinces has Maito where grilled fish is served with yucca an rice, wrapped in a banana leves.

In tradition and religion

Prasadam offered on banana leaves after Puja at a home in Guntur, India.

Banana leaves are used by Hindus and Buddhists as a decorative element for special functions, marriages, and ceremonies in southern India and Southeast Asia. Balinese Hindu prepared banana leaf as the container for floral offerings called canang dedicated for hyang (spirits or deities) and gods. These floral offerings were placed in various places around the house.

In Upper Myanmar, the banana leaf is used in handcrafting an elaborate multi-tiered offertory known as phetsein kundaung (ဖက်စိမ်းကွမ်းတောင်). In Thailand, banana leaf is used to create an offering bowl called krathong, it is an important element during traditional festival of Loy Krathong day. Thai people will celebrate this on the full-moon day of the twelfth lunar month.[15] The celebration was meant to pay respect to the Mother of Water called Phra Mae Kong Kha by floating a krathong on a body of water.[16] Other Asian countries also shares this similar festival such as; Myanmar, Laos, Cambodia, India and China.[15] Krathong means lotus-shaped vessel like a leave bowl made of banana leaves and flowers with joss sticks and a candle in the middle. During Loy Krathong festival, people carry their krathongs to the river. After lighting candles and three joss sticks and making a wish, they will gently place their krathongs on the water and let them drift away.[15] People believed that krathongs will carry their wickedness and bad luck away, and after that happiness will come to them. In fact, it is the time to be happy as the sufferings are floated away and a time to enjoy dancing, singing, or activities with other people. People use banana leaves to make krathongs because it is organic material, natural and would decompose easily.[16]

As a writing surface

Banana and palm leaves were historically the primary writing surface in many nations of South and Southeast Asia. This has influenced the evolution of their scripts. The rounded letters of many of the scripts of southern India, Sri Lanka and Southeast Asia such as Oriya and Sinhala, Burmese, and Javanese, for example, are thought to have been influenced by this: Sharp angles and tracing straight lines along the vein of the leaf with a sharp writing implement would risk splitting the leaf and ruining the surface, so rounded letters, or letters with straight lines only in the vertical or diagonal direction, were required for practical daily use.[17]

In such situations, the ribs of the leaves function as the dividing lines of ruled paper, separating lines of text. It is believed that this was so influential in the development of the rongorongo script of Easter Island that the more elaborate wood tablets were fluted to imitate the surface of a banana leaf.[18]

See also

References

  1. "Why Won't a Banana Plant's Leaves Open?". SFGate. Retrieved 5 January 2020.
  2. Nace, Trevor (2019-03-25). "Thailand Supermarket Ditches Plastic Packaging For Banana Leaves". Forbes. Retrieved 2019-03-26.
  3. Molina, A.B.; Roa, V.N.; Van den Bergh, I.; Maghuyop, M.A. Advancing banana and plantain R & D in Asia and the Pacific. p. 84. Archived from the original on 2017-12-12.
  4. Frozen Banana Leaf Archived 2012-06-30 at the Wayback Machine, Temple of Thai Food Store
  5. Black Cod Steamed in Banana Leaves with Thai Marinade Archived 2012-06-22 at the Wayback Machine, Frog Mom
  6. "Banana". Hortpurdue.edu. Archived from the original on 15 April 2009. Retrieved 2009-04-16.
  7. Elizabeth Ann Quirino (16 December 2014). "Have Filipino food, will travel". Inquirer. Archived from the original on 20 December 2014. Retrieved 6 January 2015.
  8. Margaret Littman. "Authentic Filipino Food Comes to Nashville for One-Night SALO Project Pop-Up". Nola Defender. Archived from the original on 6 January 2015. Retrieved 6 January 2015.
  9. "What I Ate @ Eureka (Palmeras)". The Hungry Giant. 5 January 2012. Archived from the original on 6 January 2015. Retrieved 6 January 2015.
  10. "Uses of Bilao, Round Bamboo Tray". Luntian Laboratory. Archived from the original on 6 January 2015. Retrieved 6 January 2015.
  11. Rowena Dumlao-Giardina (28 October 2014). "Savor the Philippines with this lunch wrapped in banana leaves". SheKnows. Archived from the original on 6 January 2015. Retrieved 6 January 2015.
  12. Maan D'Asis Pamaran (22 December 2014). "Christmas: It's really more fun in the Philippines". Manila Standard Today. Archived from the original on 6 January 2015. Retrieved 6 January 2015.
  13. Vanjo Merano (27 December 2010). "Suman sa Lihiya". Panlasang Pinoy. Archived from the original on 6 January 2015. Retrieved 6 January 2015.
  14. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2013-09-24. Retrieved 2013-06-27.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  15. Department of Cultural Promotion, Ministry of Culture (October 2014). "ลอยกระทง" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-03-04. Retrieved 2015-10-26.
  16. Seamlaem, S (10 May 2011). "ภูมิปัญญาไทยกับงานใบตอง". Archived from the original on 4 March 2016.
  17. Sanford Steever, 'Tamil Writing', in Daniels & Bright, The World's Writing Systems, 1996, p. 426
  18. Barthel, Thomas S. (1971). Pre-contact Writing in Oceania. Current Trends in Linguistics. 8. Den Haag, Paris: Mouton. p. 1169.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.