Little known fact: You can shine your shoes with the inside of a banana peel.
I didn’t believe it at first, either. But one day, my friend approached me with a dusty pair of black leather Oxfords and said, “Dude I want to wear these, but they really need a shine.”
I sensed an opportunity. “Do you have,” I said, as nonchalantly as I could, “a banana?”
To which he rightfully replied, “How does that have anything to do with what I just said?”
I told him about the hidden utility of a banana peel. He looked at me incredulously, unsure if my suggestion of rubbing raw fruit on a fairly valuable possession of his was a sincere attempt to help, or just a dig on his intelligence.
Long story short, he trusted me. And it worked. His shoes looked much better after a once-over with the banana peel and a dry paper towel. High-fives were exchanged.
Bananas are manna from heaven. They have so much to offer, but all too often their vast power goes untapped. Shining shoes aside, I find they make for particularly magical ingredients in milkshakes.
That’s why for this week’s dining hall challenge, I set out to make a banana milkshake. Check it out:
- Find a banana. This is deceivingly hard in the dining halls. They’re usually snatched up at breakfast, with few remaining by the time lunch rolls around. Getting a banana at dinnertime is akin to finding a four-leaf clover. So shoot for a midday milkshake.
- Peel the banana and, over a bowl, cut it into one-eighth-inch slices. Only use half of it if you’re making just one shake. Save the peel for shining your shoes.
- Put the banana in the microwave for 10 seconds. In case you haven’t noticed, there are no blenders in the dining halls, so you’re gonna have to hand-mash the nanners. The microwave helps soften them up a bit.
- Mash the warmed banana with a fork until it looks like baby food. The fewer chunks, the better.
- Add about three-quarters of a dining hall cupful of soft-serve ice cream to the bowl. (I used vanilla, but my girlfriend suggested using chocolate and I have reason to believe she’s on to something.)
- Stir like crazy. Everyone has different ideas for what the consistency of a milkshake should be, so add more ice cream if you want it thicker. Peanut butter serves as a tasty thickening agent as well.
- Now for the transfer to a cup, unless you plan on drinking from the bowl like a feral child. Tip the bowl partially toward your cup, but use a spoon to guide in the shake the rest of the way. The spoon is crucial. I tried doing without it at first and ended up feeding a sizeable portion of my shake to the table.
- Revel in your resourcefulness.
“Yeah,” his friend chimed in. “It looks like cottage cheese.”
Now, they both had a point. But this thing was delicious, and that’s what matters. Let the haters carry on with their plebian sustenance. Maybe even tell them to shine your shoes with a banana peel while they’re at it.
P.S. If you ever want to try one of these recipes, but don’t want to/don’t have the confidence to make it yourself, I’ll happily make you one in exchange for being swiped in. Cheers!