back to article Irish firm seeks Trainee Assistant Banana Ripener

The Irish readers among you pondering a radical change of career could do worse than consider this vacancy down at Dublin-based Global Fruit Co. Ltd, which is currently a bit short-handed in its banana-ripening department: Trainee Assistant Banana Ripener Global Fruit Co. Ltd is the sole authorised distributor for Del Monte …

COMMENTS

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  1. Steve Martin

    Salary

    I hear the pay is peanuts

  2. Trevor Watt

    Of course there are banana ripeners

    Did you think the ripened all by them self?

    When picked the bananas are green and have their ripening halted by the way they are packed. They are then ripened and repacked in a 'packhouse' using a 'Ripening Stage Guide' which is used to judge the ripeness. Most bananas are ready to ship at stage 3 minus and are then moved to the supermarkets' warehouses in trucks that are kept at 14 degrees centigrade. Bananas die and the flash goes gray and hard if refrigerated.

    If you have any bananas at home that are going to go over-ripe then peel, slice and freeze them. Then put the frozen slices into your blender with some milk and a spot of honey for instant banana ice-cream. A little more milk makes a nice thick milk shake.

  3. Smallbrainfield

    Is Mick really the best stereotypical Oirish name you could come up with?

    Honestly.

  4. Austin Tayshus

    Poor industrial relations

    I used to have this job! Terrible workplace culture, the forklift operators drove me bananas...

  5. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    All those things

    you've never heard of before, eh? As Trevor said, bananas are difficult to handle and you have to provide all sorts of fuss so that nit-picky king customer gets them in a near perfect stage, maybe a little green, but without even a hint of brown spots. Watch more of those stupid "how the world works" documentaries for adults on your favourite dumb-me-down-into-total-acceptance network.

  6. Mike Plunkett

    Careful Lester

    Any more stories like this and you'll have the Irish version of D. Bevan after you...

    @Smallbrainfield - could have been worse, he could have gone for Paddy...

  7. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    S'true

    I would have chosen Fergus, or Shamus (hey, pick Shamus, it has an IT link (Shamus Arran) :)

  8. Andrew Moore

    Jaysus

    Not only did we have to endure the 800 years and the Cromwell but now we have to endure you brits taking the mick out of our banana ripeners. And sure isn't there vitriolic hatred just dripping from every word.

    Is Mise

    Seamus

  9. amanfromAlphaCentauri

    International Measurement Unit of Flame Temperature

    Hot on the heels of the Reg's SI Unit revision programme, I feel it's time for some more honorary additions.

    Henceforth the international SI unit for measuring the temperature of internet flames shall be known as the Bevan, or bV, where 1bV is the flame energy required to raise the temperature under a Reg hack's collar by 1 degree centigrade at sea level.

    Usage: "The response to the recent Sheep in a Vacuum article generated a flame temperature of 16.4bV".

  10. Derek Williams

    Actually Bananas are big business in Ireland

    They're one of our biggest exports (and naturally enough imports too) one company managed to convince the courts that ripening was 'Manifacturing' so they benifit from really low corporation tax as a result!

  11. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    or more likely......

    'How was the game on Sunday' than

    'How was the match on Saturday?;

    to which Mícheál will most likely reply "twas a great game, we bate those dubs black and blue" - and then maybes they'll talk about ba-na-nas.

  12. Raheim Sherbedgia

    @S'true

    Isn't that spelled Seamus?

    RS

  13. Graham Bartlett

    @Andrew Moore (or Seamus)

    Not true, El Reg was adding the Mick into the story, not taking the Mick out of it...

  14. Niall

    One banana...

    ... two banana, three banana, four.

    Four bananas make a bunch and so do many more.

    Jaysus, I've got great numerical banana skills, now to dust off my CV.

  15. Andrew Moore

    @ Graham Bartlett

    Too late- they've taken the Mick out of it.

  16. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    @Graham Bartlett

    You, sir, are a genius.

  17. cor

    Jaaykers ...

    As a true paddymick meself I can only add:

    Boomtown Rats : 1980

    "Banana Republic

    Septic Isle

    Screaming in the Suffering sea

    It sounds like crying (crying, crying)

    Everywhere I go, oh yeah

    Everywhere I see

    The black and blue uniforms

    Police and priests"

    (Bob Geldof is a visionary ... hehe)

  18. Shane McCarrick

    Its true- banana ripening is legally a manufacturing process

    Its true- Fyffes took the Irish Revenue Commissioners to court, and got a legal judgement in their favour that banana ripening is a manufacturing process (as per link here:

    http://www.bailii.org/cgi-bin/markup.cgi?doc=/ie/cases/IESC/2000/37.html&query=fyffes&method=all

    and

    http://www.revenue.ie/publications/txbrefng/tb41.pdf (note: page 32)

    )

    Ireland imported a total of 48,788 tonnes of bananas into Ireland in 2005 (valued at Euro 26.214m)- In the same year we exported a total of 9,109 tonnes of bananas (valued at Euro 8.57m). So- contrary to popular belief, its not a major agricultural commodity from Ireland's perspective(particularly when you look at beef etc). I couldn't be arsed looking up stats for 2006- but they are available from our central statistics office.

    For those genuinely interested in banana ripening- they are artificially ripened, in a manner similar to oranges (which coincidentally are also picked green) in ethylene oxide. This gives the skin a nice yellow colour, while maintaining a reasonable shelf life for the supermarkets (which is why a fresh banana in the supermarket will have a really thick skin and is quite hard- a few days on the shelf at ~20 degrees will ripen it properly).

    Shane

  19. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Of course banana's need ripening...

    after all, you don't think they grow on trees, do you?

  20. Luke

    Ethylene

    And there I was thinking that ethylene was used to ripen fruit... Now I know it's an irishman with a spreadsheet. I feel much better.

    I wonder if the speed of a banana ripening is greater than the velocity of a sheep in a vaccum?

  21. Perry

    @Trevor Watt

    I would like to nominate Mr. Watt for the "Totally not what I expected to read on the Reg today, yet found to be crazy interesting information" Award...

    +1 to banana ripener skills

    +1 to smoothie making skills

    Thanks Reg!

  22. Shane McCarrick

    don't grow on trees?

    To the poster who is suggesting bananas don't grow on trees- even tongue in cheek....... you're actually 100% right (on a technicality.......) Funnily enough a banana is actually a herb........

  23. The Aussie Paradox

    Banana Ripeners?

    Some of those rude, southern states of Australia like to call us Queensland residents, Banana Benders. So it appears that people believe, Bananas' bend *AND* ripen themselves. What kind of miraculous food product do people think they are?

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_regional_nicknames

    Oh well, at least the sheep feel safe here.

  24. Rhys

    Trees are perennials

    Bananas are annuals (in some climates). the trunk is actually just a thick fleshy stem and bananas grow on a new one each season.

    I wonder what would happen if the trainee WASN'T good with excell... read the wrong columns and send out the bananas that arrived the day previous while several tons of mouldering bananas in the back room are busy learning how to make fire?

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