A Korean Supermarket’s Clever Packaging That Sells Bananas by Ripeness
We’ve all gone through the harrowing process of staring at a bunch of bananas, grabbing the one that ‘looks’ right, and coming home only to find the rest turning brown too soon or still rock-green. Well, one South Korean grocery chain decided to treat that everyday annoyance like a packaging challenge. They took the banana and re-imagined how we buy, eat, and waste it. And the best part is that they put it all in one smart box!
A Bunch Designed for a Week of Bananas
Most of us buy bananas in bunches and assume we’ll eat them quickly enough before they get overripe or go bad. But because they ripen together, you end up with them too green at the start and mushy at the end.
That’s why a South Korean retailer, E-Mart, launched what they call a “one-a-day banana” pack (also branded as Haru Hana Banana), which contains six bananas arranged from fully ripe to merely green. The idea is that you eat the riper ones first, and by the time you finish the pack, the last banana hits its sweet spot.
This is a tailored solution to a universal problem. According to Swedish research cited in industry coverage, bananas are the most wasted supermarket food item in that country, both in terms of weight and environmental impact.
The Packaging Paradox
Some consumers praised the idea as “genius at work.” Others raised eyebrows, noting, “Why wrap bananas in extra plastic when the peel already protects them?” In an era when many retailers are eliminating plastic straws and single-use packaging, this move may seem counterintuitive to some. On the other hand, if more food is eaten instead of being thrown out, perhaps the net environmental impact shifts. It’s a trade-off worth pondering.