I once vacuum-sealed three ripe bananas on a whim, curious if removing the air would truly keep them fresh. To my surprise, when I cut them open a few days later, they were perfectly preserved—sweet, yellow, and without a hint of browning.
This experiment proves a key point: bananas spoil because of oxidation and ethylene gas. Sealing them removes the air (oxygen) that causes this reaction, significantly slowing down the ripening process.
Okay, so I vacuum-sealed three bananas the other day. No reason, really—just one of those random life experiments. A few days later, I finally cut them open, half-expecting a science experiment gone wrong.
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