Our department has a lunch meeting every Wednesday where first year students sit and eat while a faculty member tells us about their research how they got where they are, and sometimes their life story, etc. it’s a nice time / I’m all about free food.

Delivery options are limited around the Columbia University Medical Center campus. Hence why every single week lunch ends up being one of 3 options: pizza that smells like burnt Chuck E Cheese kitchen grease and is paired with a salad cloaked in sad cold deli meat (and one plain salad, but that goes fast), Dominican food, or on a good day, sandwiches on really strangely delicious fluffy crusty white hoagie bread.

Dominican food days are frequent, and I don’t hate it. The buffet has enough veggie options (salad with avocado, rice, beans) that I can finagle a decent meal out of it.

The star of every Dominican week is, of course, the fried plantains. Sticky sweet gooey goodness, the fried plantains have become a cherished and familiar treat.

It dawned upon me this week that I’ve never actually made plantains at home which considering bananas and potatoes are my favorite foods and plantains are essentially the potato of bananas (as in not sweet and rather starchy), is quite odd. So over the weekend I decided to change this. I picked up some plantains, 3/$1, at my local grocery store.

A kind woman was also picking out plantains when I was sorting through them. I asked her if she had any advice for a new plantain cook, and she told me to wait until the plantains were “soft like sponges.” Noted.

Now onto cooking. I don’t love frying things and my stomach doesn’t love eating large quantities of fried food. Hence why I after doing some googling to confirm it was possible, I opted to bake mine.

I did mine skin-on because the method sounded intriguing to me. You can totally peel them and cube them, coat them in oil and seasonings, and bake them that way (just for a shorter duration, 20-25 minutes until tender rather than 40-45).

If you are curious about the skin-on method as I was, I am happy to report that it totally works. Just take it out of the oven when the foil-wrapped plantain gives to a squeeze.

Next comes topping. I played around with topping these babies. One I coined and ate with melted vegan butter and brown sugar.

Another I drizzled with almond butter, cinnamon, and a dash of sugar. The last I ate with leftover black bean soup and cilantro. I decided they would also taste great with guacamole. All were solid options, and it was a very plantain-filled day.

Speaking of filled, I found plantains quite filling. I plan to keep this in mind since they are a cheap starchy piece of produce aka something I desperately need to befriend.

I hope you give these a try. If you do, please let me know, and let me know how you topped or are them.

Happy plantaining!

Easy Baked Plantains

Prep Time: 2 minutes

Cook Time: 35-45 minutes

Servings: 2 Ingredients: 2 medium very spotted ripe plantains Method: Preheat oven to 400 degrees Fahrenheit. Using a knife, draw a slit lengthwise down each plantain. Wrap each plantain (skin on) in aluminum foil, or lay out on a baking sheet with parchment paper underneath. Bake plantains for 35-50 minutes (depending on size/oven) until soft and squeezeable to the touch. Remove from oven and allow to cool. Top and eat as desired. Topping Ideas: non-dairy butter + 1 teaspoon brown sugar + dash cinnamon

drizzle of almond butter + cinnamon + sugar

black bean soup + salsa + cilantro

guacamole

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