Why do I need over ripe bananas for banana muffins?
Okay, I won't use prefer to use raw bananas for sure.
But, I wish to understand why are over ripe bananas required for the muffins. Why won't ripe (yellow) bananas do?
From: https://cooking.stackexchange.com/a/24652/6168
You want to wait until they're so ripe you wouldn't want to eat them - blackening skin, very very soft.
Best Answer
They are easier to mash (so that they incorporate more smoothly into the batter), sweeter (more starch has converted to sugar), and more aromatic when overripe.
Still, you can get quite a good muffin or banana bread from fully ripe, but not overripe, bananas.
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Quick Answer about "Why do I need over ripe bananas for banana muffins?"
Brown, overripe bananas are sweeter because in the ripening process the starches in the banana are converted to sugar. You can even use super-soft, black bananas that have a really strong smell and are oozy inside. As long as they're not moldy, there's no such thing as too-ripe bananas for banana bread.Do you have to use overripe bananas for banana muffins?
As for whether a banana can ever be too black or overripe to use for bread, you'd be surprised. Even if the interior is very mushy and the peel is black, as long as the banana doesn't have any mold growing on it, you're good to use it in your bread.Do you have to use ripe bananas for banana cake?
right/bottom ~ A banana must be really ripe \u2014 nearly all brown and even, if you want, well into "black" \u2014 to yield luscious banana flavor in banana bread, banana cake and banana cookies.How ripe should bananas be for muffins?
Let the bananas ripen (and overripen) at room temperature. Depending on the weather, this could take a few days, or up to a week. The best bananas for banana bread aren't yellow; they're black. Or they're at least streaked with black/brown, with just the barest hint of green at the stem.I never waste ripe bananas!🍌! No knead! No Sugar! Incredibly Easy, Soft and Fluffy
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Answer 2
At the risk of heresy, I say when over-ripe is called for it is by the mistaken impression that the flavor is improved when it is only that it is sweeter, less starchy. Muffins will brown faster.
I believe this myth grew out of the fact that recipes were created to use up what would otherwise go to waste: it then was inferred that over-ripe is ideal.
My personal opinion (highly heretical) is that slightly under-ripe bananas yield muffins with more banana-y flavor (not burnt sugar flavor). I began experimenting after finding that banana chips are made from half-green bananas. A bit of acid in the muffin batter (sm squeeze of lemon perhaps) further brings out the banana flavor.
Starchier under-ripe bananas bake up fluffier relative to the brown ones -I don't even need eggs or egg sub!
In the end, it's all about personal preference but for recognizable banana flavor, bake up a batch each and invite friends to a taste test which has 'more bananas' in the recipe. I'm betting greenies.
Answer 3
Most people want that distinct banana flavour. Which you get with over-ripe bananas. If you use bananas that are still suitable for eating, it won't be banana-y enough.
Answer 4
I have used yellow bananas that were absent of any spots - it was still very young and the bread I baked didn't taste like banana at all not to mention it took very long to brown and the consistency of the bread was not at all suitable. I couldn't bring myself to even share it with anyone else because of how bad it turned out. All I could taste was the cinnamon and nutmeg.
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