Catscankim
Well-Known Member
Been doing some gardening lately i added these seeds to my collection….
Peter peppers.
Look em up and tell me whatcha think
Peter peppers.
Look em up and tell me whatcha think
I grew them a few years ago, didn't get any of the shapes I was expecting. Hope you have better luckBeen doing some gardening lately i added these seeds to my collection….
Peter peppers.
Look em up and tell me whatcha think
Been doing some gardening lately i added these seeds to my collection….
Peter peppers.
Look em up and tell me whatcha think
It said it has a mild heat like a sweet pepper. My friend asked me what religion they were lolWhat do *I* think?
I think that come harvest time we should be allowed to say "eat a ****" and you will know we mean spicy...?
Too much?
Apologies.
It looks around the same 'heat' as a serrano on the Scoville scale, so that is a very usable pepper. We use serranos in place of jalepenos in recipes because we have better luck growing them, but if we could grow these, I could keep a "bag of...heh" in the freezer!
Serranos are generally hotter than jalapeno but jals can have a huge range of heat. I got some at a farmers market that were significantly hotter than serranos.I would say a serrano is a mild heat! LOL
Sorry for my disinformation. I was doing the wikipedia thing and I would swear the range was above a jalepeno.
Sweet peters?
I will pass.
Gimme spicy!
We can't grow any of those trees here. I believe it is because they require a cold few months to go dormant before they fruit. Don't quote me on that, but I think that's what I read.@Catscankim
I'm jealous of all the fruit tree you can grow. I'm in idaho so all we can have is apples, pears, plums, cherries and if the right varieties, peaches and apricots.
I have a couple apple trees and a apricot that I've been grafting on, a peach tree that is new last year and has one sad little fruit on it.
My blueberries haven't had fruit in three years so I think they are going this year. At least I can grow rhubarb.
I might have access to some hab seeds, my mom participates in a seed swap every spring and she usually ends up with a bunch of pepper seeds she will never grow. She also has at least 100 different tomato varieties and who knows how many beans. What is your heat tolerance of peppers?
I don't think I have it in me to even drop one of those peppers you mentioned in a pot of soup LOL.Pepper chat!!!
We grow superhots - carolina reaper, ghost, 7 pot, scorps, etc. Dehydrate them, make chili powder - use that in recipes instead of more mundane chili powders. We also have little vials of the powder we carry on our person if/when we eat out and need spice.
Jalepenos are supposed to be around 2500-10k Scovilles and serranos 10-25k. Habanero 100-300k and red habaneroeven higher.
Serranos are our mild pepper, but if we are cooking something intending to be spicy we usually go for red habaneros (keep the homegrowns in the freezer to add to soups & stews when cooking).
I forget what the gardener half is growing this year.
Other half on our second date tried the green salsa at one of my fave CaliMex* restaurants and thought it too spicy. Told him I can not cook mild, so he got addicted to capsaicin. Sometimes spicy food helps relieve body pains, which are a way of life for me.
*If there is TexMex then I use the term "CaliMex" because it is SoCal infused Mexican food. I do not know if there is a correct term, but I am ignorant.
@Catscankim you should look into mango hotsauce, there are facebook groups about hotsauce and mango is very popular.
I've been wanting to make pepper flakes with lemon aji but I didn't grow any this year. They are hotter than cayenne but have a nice flavor and are incredibly prolific
I don't think I have it in me to even drop one of those peppers you mentioned in a pot of soup LOL.
I intend to make hot sauce this year, which is why I got tabasco peppers. And I put cayenne powder in literally everything, so I will be making some of that this year too.
A long time ago somebody I knew used to make hot pickles. I haven't had anything like them since I left Philly, so I will be giving those a shot too.
I went ahead and bought a small aji lemon off etsy, along with a death spiral.I have never been able to source aji here. I use dried in some of my beans. Ooooh, I hope you can grow some next year!
I went ahead and bought a small aji lemon off etsy, along with a death spiral.
If I get fruit, I'd be happy to share seeds with you. Most the time, seeds make it to Canada just fine.
Are you on Facebook? If so, you should join pepper lovers, its a bunch of crazy pepperheads sharing growing tips and general love of peppers. Its really focused on superhots.
Thank you, but I think trading seeds across borders is one of the big No-Nos (biological something something). I am not the gardener here, tho. I just make demands and lately it has been for eggplant! (Becaue baba ganoush is a way of life)
I am not on FB. I avoid being online for the most part and have serious difficulties with socialising - and the algorithms for FB can be extremely oppressive for my people, especially those as messy as me.
Depends on which countries are trading and what kind of seeds. Peppers and tomatoes are ok for most countries. That facebook group does a lot of international trading, worse thing that happens is the seeds are confiscated and destroyed. If you change your mind, let me know
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