waste. It’s one of the reasons I grocery shop frequently, only buying what I’ll use right away, rather than purchasing food for a few weeks at a time.
But no matter what I do, I always wind up with a surplus of bananas.
My intentions to eat the fruit, which is rich in potassium, vitamin C and fiber, says Lorraine Kearney, CEO and founder of New York City Nutrition, before a workout or as a snack tend to go unfulfilled.
Luckily, there are plenty of ways to use bananas before they go bad — even if they’re overripe.
USA TODAY rounded up a few good recipes to make use of the versatile fruit in the forms of breakfast, snack and dessert.
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Banana muffins with chocolate chips have been a staple dessert in my life since the time I was growing up — plus, if you want to believe, they can double as breakfast. Major win, in my book.
These are fairly easy to bake and can be made gluten free by substituting 1:1 gluten free baking flour for regular flour.
The recipe I used here is one I found on Taste of Home and altered by substituting gluten-free flour and adding chocolate chips.
Here’s how I did it:
If you don’t eat these within a couple days (good luck) they freeze well, too.
Overnight oats can be made with a wide range of ingredients — and banana is a really great one to add.
Looking around my kitchen last night I was trying to decide what I could make in advance for a healthy Monday morning breakfast. I had chia seeds, a banana, powdered peanut butter, and oats along with Greek yogurt.
After some searching on Google, I found this recipe for overnight oats from Clean and Delicious and tweaked it to use powdered peanut butter instead of regular peanut butter.
I combined:
And then folded in:
Then I popped it in the fridge overnight in a covered dish. This breakfast is protein packed (18 g per my calculations!), fiber full (11 g) and super filling and tasty at 321 calories.
Bananas are often a fundamental ingredient in smoothies of many variations and they can be added straight from the fruit basket or after being frozen — smoothies are easy and can be adjusted to your liking.
I’ve tried a bunch with bananas and these are two of my favorites.
My post-workout breakfast smoothie is inspired by this one from Chocolate Covered Katie’s site.
Here’s what I added to the blender:
A peach mango protein smoothie is another option.
Recently, I tried a peach mango protein smoothie that I concocted with some inspiration from A Couple Cooks‘ recipe. This one makes around 2 small smoothies.
Here’s what I added to the blender:
Kearney says that bananas change as they ripen — and are good for several stages, and are edible longer than you’d might think.
“As a banana ripens it changes color from the green chlorophyll by ethylene hormone to produce a softer yellow sweet banana that is ripe for eating,” she explains. “As it matures, it turns brown and increases in sweetness until it decays.”
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