Allotments 4 All
Produce => Edible Plants => Topic started by: George the Pigman on February 11, 2019, 21:47:12
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I generally always grown Cayenne as a chilli but its boring but reliable. Any recommendations for interesting chillies now I am sorting out my seeds for this year.
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I like Bulgarian Carrot and Hungarian Hot Wax - both hot but not volcanic and attractive fruits too.
Black Hungarian is mild and an attractive dark purple/black colour.
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Trinidad Perfume is fun. No heat at all but taste exactly like they should be hot - really nice flavour.
John's Super Long - quite hot and up to a foot long - fun to grow.
Bird's Eye - For that authentic SE Asian taste.
Padron - mild and great for stuffing.
Lemon Drop - Hot with a citrus taste
Biquinho - small, mild and fruity
Prairie Fire - small plants, quick to ripen and quite hot - good for indoors.
If you want something hot then try Carolina Reaper or Trinidad Scorpion. Too hot for me but good for adding heat to sauces.
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Tobago Seasoning has a rich Habanero flavour and no more than medium heat - I can enjoy eating a raw one without too much pain. They are a bit quicker to mature than Trinidad Perfume. If you grow enough you can make chilli sauce that is as hot as Encona/Tabasco but with twice the flavour.
Bulgarian Teardrop has citrus notes like Lemon Drop but moreso - probably closer to Aji Amarillo but with half the heat - another interesting sauce chilli and very good added to Asian food - best raw and diced to 1 or 2mm to maximise the overtones of citrus & under-ripe guava and scattered on at the last minute - especially if not everyone wants chilli... Also good to liven up glut-buster veg stews.
All the rocoto/locoto/manzano chillies are middling to hot (very dependent on the season). They are 100% perennial if overwintered at 4C and don't sulk in the spring - they are never overtaken by the next year's seedlings. The first years crop will be mostly green but that isn't a problem because though the green ones are milder they taste more like black pepper in the background than chilli in the foreground - brilliant for lifting milder food (eg Italian and English) to a more delicious level.
I also recommend the mini-sweet peppers (chiquino? look like fat jalapenos). They have a different sweet-pepper flavour that's much less bland and without heat. Buy a pack at your local supermarket - the orange ones are best so take their seeds and sow them soon. Not the cheapest peppers but certainly the cheapest seeds and very easy to grow - and you'll know exactly what the flavour is going to be.
Cheers.
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My overall favourite is Ring of Fire, hot without being too hot, dries well usually without wrinkles so looks great when strung in the kitchen and isn't particularly fussy.
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Ring of Fire is one of my favourites as well!
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i grow most of the hot ones reaper naga scorpions etc pot black is easy to grow chilli going from green to black, purple to red medium heat there's a lot to choose from i always try to grow one different variety every year prairie fire this year last year i grew the chilli mix from suttons thats a good way to try a few vareities for the price of one packet hope this helps