The Hancock-Henderson Quill, Inc.



Farm Family Insights: Natalie Dowell Schmitt

Thinking Out Loud

-by Natalie (Dowell) Schmitt – mnschmitt@jetup.net

WILD FOR BANANAS

When is a banana ripe and ready? This is one of our running arguments.

Mark likes a slightly green skinned, firm banana to eat on his way out to do morning chores. I wait for them to turn black and mushy. Mark calls these rotten, and I call them ready to bake.

For me, Christmas time and bananas go hand in hand. As a little kid, Mom would bake banana bread in empty soup cans as gifts for teachers and older neighbors.

Sealing up the cylinder loaf of sweet bread in plastic wrap and finishing it off by wrapping it up in tin foil topped with a bow. They looked like presents ready to go under the tree.

Today, I bake banana bread gifts in mini loaf pans. I haven't used soup cans in years, but the memory of the circular bread brings a smile to my face of holidays in the kitchen with my mom.

Here is her recipe for banana bread and other family favorite banana recipes to use up all those rotten bananas.

As a side note. I get a big box of bananas from a neighbor when they are overstocked.

I wait for them to ripen and will then freeze three or six peeled, smashed bananas in a bag. Measured and ready to bake with at a later date.

Banana Bread

by Grandma Becky Dowell

1 1/2 cups sugar
2 cups flour
1/2 cup butter (1 stick) soft
2 eggs
5 tablespoons sour milk
3 ripe bananas, mashed
1 teaspoon baking soda
1 teaspoon vanilla
dash salt

Cream sugar, butter and eggs. Dissolve soda in sour milk. Mix dry ingredients. Alternate dry and milk into creamed mixture Add mashed bananas. Pour into greased and floured bread pan. Bake at 325 degrees for 1 hour.

Rhea's Banana Cake

Banana Cream Cheesecake Bars

Blueberry Banana Bread