Cathy2 wrote:HI,
You may be surprised: you can easily buy fresh banana blossoms in Chicago on Argyle.
Food matters wrote:Banana Blossoms (Thai: hua blii)
When purchasing, choose a fur large bud with a good even colour. Open one or two of the outer leaves, if the inner leaves are beginning to firm, then choose another. There is a lot of wastage, with 2/3 of the bud being discarded in cleaning. . . To prepare the blossoms, remove the outer coarse and coloured leaves to reveal the creamy white heart. Quarter the heart lengthwise, rub quickly with lemon juice or lime juice, remove the core and shake out the very bitter stamens by flapping the quarter against the palm of your hand, then immediately place in salted acidulated water. Repeat with the remaining quarters. Do not slice more than half an hour before use or the blossoms will discolour despite the acidulated water.
Reading these directions for preparing fresh banana blossoms makes some sense out of the fact that I always think of artichokes when I eat banana blossoms. I wonder if they have some common properties from a chemical/botanical perspective?
For those who are interested, fresh banana blossoms are also available at Marketplace on Oakton in Skokie. A banana blossom is a thing of beauty, the leaves being delicately striated with a subtle purple. Before I knew what they were, I used them as a table decoration in a big bowl along with bumpy bright green bitter melons.
Man : I can't understand how a poet like you can eat that stuff.
T. S. Eliot: Ah, but you're not a poet.