Well it wont be long till I start some chilies off - al least some of the long season ones which for me marks the start of the season.
So what, if anything, are you growing this year?
I am doing Gambia Red, Medusa, Thai birds eye, Fatali Red and some saved seed from god knows where!
Goats horn chilli.
Long , sweet and nicely spiced!!! They look fab to
Still got a greenhouse full of Patio Sizzle going strong - they seem to do well and crop prolifically every year - so will be growing some more.
Also doing cayenne, Habenero, Birds Eye, Scotch Bonnet, probably jalapeno and whatever other chilli seeds fall into my lap! May try Bhut Jolokia again as they failed last year :blob8: Cant wait to get cracking!! :toothy10:
Habanero, jalapeno, hungarian hot wax, lemon drops, chenzo, papecchia and padron. Nothing to really blow your head off, but enough to keep our dinner spicy. :)
All in the propagator today....am saving seed from all the non-F1s in that lot this year.
I'm definitely growing several Caldero OP plants
Most likely but not yet sown;
Black Hungarian
Rocotto
Black Prince
Cayennetta F1
Pyramid
Pretty in Purple
Carli Ston Mild
We are doing Vampire and Ring of Fire chillies this year.
Paul
Still finding Jalapino in the freezer after many years after a mega crop.
Gonna grow more.
thanks to a seedie gift - now adding alberto's locoto and facing heaven to my sowing for this year.
Whooop!!
Looking good so far. Good germination rates and early warmth/sum in the window and they are racing ahead, Particularly the Thai and some Reaper which have been potted on already.
Quote from: BarriedaleNick on March 02, 2014, 09:04:02
Looking good so far. Good germination rates and early warmth/sum in the window and they are racing ahead, Particularly the Thai and some Reaper which have been potted on already.
Our chilli seeds were dispatched on Friday from Real Seeds so will hopefully get them monday and get them sown!, Never normally planted them to the end of March
I go a little early esp on the hot long season varieties. There is a danger of them getting a little leggy but they seem to do fine on a window sill until it is warm enough for them to go into the poly-tunnel. End of March is perfectly fine for most varieties.
I have some green birds eye in the fŕidge which I will remove seeds from & sow.
Am I right in presuming they change from green to red as they ripen?
I would prefer them to be red for use
Debs
They will ripen to red and they are nice chilies - apparently easy to grow even on a window sill!
Sowed 24 Padron today so that I can have lots of games of "Spanish Roulette". I had 6 plants last year and they performed very well outside on the allotment, but I could do with a lot more. They make a fantastic bar snack and I take platters of them down to the Local on Sunday lunchtime.
Also sown 24 Heatwave, which are very good for pickling, very visually attractive in a jar as green, yellow and red mix.
Both varieties are from saved seed, so I hope they're OK. I'll find out in a week or so!
My chilli seeds have just arrived - Red Padron, Bulgarian Carrot and Black Hungarian so I'll be sowing them this weekend along with seeds for two new tomatoes I'm trying - Brandywine Sudduth Strain and Indigo Rose, all from Plant World Seed.
I'll also be trying seeds from some dried Kashmiri chillies I've bought on mail order. Nothing ventured and all that.
First of the Padron peppers, sown 6th March in heated propagator, sprouting today. First time I've used saved seed, so I hope the others show as well.
Now 15 out of 24 showing, so tomorrow morning they all come out and the Heatwave go in.
I got a bit carried away but have finally sown my chilli seeds :icon_cheers:
All tucked up in the propagator
De-hybridising Caldero
Aji Fantasy
Black Hungarian
Black Prince
Carli Ston Mild
Cayennetta F1
Fish Pepper
Pink Habanero
Pretty in Purple
Pyramid
Starburst
All Rocotos;
Rocotto Yellow - seeds from More veg last year unfortunately didn't grow true, trying the remainder this year.
Aji Largo
Red Peruvian
Guatemala Orange
Albert's Locoto
And fingers crossed for these as older seeds
Lantern
Mild Jalapeno
Nigels Outdoors Green
Lots of seedlings through now :icon_cheers:
No shows Guatamala Orange, which I've resown a couple of seeds and Nigels Outdoors Green, none left to sow. I think one each growing of Mild Jalapeno and Lantern, which is great as the seeds are well past their sowing date.
Jalapeno
Cayenne
Numex Big Jim
Apache
Chesno
Vampire
All germinated well from seed that is at least a year old (50p sale in September), currently in 3" pots waiting to be potted on but not pot bound so no rush.... will be going direct into the ground in the greenhouse once the half-hardy stuff like pumpkins finish moving out (next week sometime hopefully)
chrisc
New year and new sowings....2015! :icon_cheers:
I have just finished my play session with chilli seeds....and have some in propagator and some as seedlings in my cabinet.
This year I've done;
Naranga C.baccatum...heat level 6-7
Queen Laurie , baccatum, 6-7
Blondie, ,baccatum, 6-7
C02597, baccatum, 8
Bonda Ma Jaque, chinense, 9
Peito de Moca, chinense, 7-8
Murupi Amarela, chinense, 9
Arabibi Gusano, chinense, 8-9
Chinese Pot, annuum, 7
Trinidad Morouga, chinense, 10
Serrano, annuum, 7
Vampire, annuum, ?
'mix freebie bag' of chilli seeds, ?,?
Ah...that's better...and another couple weeks or so and it is time for peppers.. :icon_cheers:
I'm keeping my eye on for small second hand GH...it would be great to expand the growing space... :drunken_smilie:
Lumme Goodlife, what do you do with all those chillies? And all the other things that you grow?
Quote from: lottie lou on January 18, 2015, 15:42:51
Lumme Goodlife, what do you do with all those chillies? And all the other things that you grow?
It does 'look/sound' a lot but I only keep one plant (or so...) of each variety. So after all it is not that much.
But still, I do grow more than I use and probably end up giving lot of my chillies away. This year I gave couple of those blue mushroom baskets/trays full of chillies to local Chinese take away shop's staff. They always look after us when we order something and after those chillies we did get some discount too :happy7: The owner of the shop is now VERY interested to come and see what allotments look like and what I grow...as for other things...same apply, we only use so much and rest of the crop is given away or used as 'currency' to barter something else in return. At the moment we are enjoying different game birds... :icon_cheers:
I haven't made my mind up yet! Certainly some Thai Bird's Eye and something ridiculously hot but I'm waiting till Feb to get going. I made so much hot sauce last year that I don't need to grow any this year. I have a huge jar of dried chilis and some frozen ones too but no doubt I'll still do a load this year.
Quote from: BarriedaleNick on January 19, 2015, 07:59:04
I haven't made my mind up yet! Certainly some Thai Bird's Eye and something ridiculously hot but I'm waiting till Feb to get going. I made so much hot sauce last year that I don't need to grow any this year. I have a huge jar of dried chilis and some frozen ones too but no doubt I'll still do a load this year.
I didn't get round to do any hot sauce..though I have save your recipe. I did dry most my spare chillies and still have handful of fresh ones too. I've now started use superhot ones by just snipping with scissors some teeny pieces into cooking food. I left stalks on the chillies to hold on and now I don't suffer with burning nose and fingers nor stinging eyes...like I do when I'm attempting grinding them...so easy now :icon_cheers: (why did it take so long to learn from one's errors :drunken_smilie:)
I'll leave powder grinding for less hot varieties as no matter how careful one is....there is always some accidents involved.
Nice list goodlife, lots I don't know so will have a Google :happy7:
I haven't looked yet, but likely a Rocoto or two, Caldero grow outs, Lantern and I don't know what. Must get a move on, hopefully aiming to sow in February if I can shake the winter blues!
This year it will hopefully be these:
Habaneros (on their 3rd year)
Lemon drop (same)
Royal Black
Alberto's locoto rocoto
Fish
Joe's Long
Padrons
Facing heaven
and then whatever's in the seed circle parcel ;) (yippeee!)
Quoteand then whatever's in the seed circle parcel ;) (yippeee!)
Lol...somebody sounds excited... :toothy10:...I'm sure there is some chilli seeds to come, I know I included couple of types.
I had my best year ever for chillies last year due to the good weather, so I'm going to scale back a bit this year as I have loads frozen! I got unexpectedly good results from two T&M mixed packs I got from the Wyevale seed sale, Hot Stuff and Tropical Heat, so I'm just growing those......boring huh!
Quote from: Deb P on January 19, 2015, 12:05:01
I had my best year ever for chillies last year due to the good weather, so I'm going to scale back a bit this year as I have loads frozen! I got unexpectedly good results from two T&M mixed packs I got from the Wyevale seed sale, Hot Stuff and Tropical Heat, so I'm just growing those......boring huh!
Nah..not boring at all...if they do the 'trick' that's fine then :icon_cheers: And who would not settle for loads 'hot stuff'... :tongue3: :icon_cheers:
Quote from: Deb P on January 19, 2015, 12:05:01
I got from the Wyevale seed sale, Hot Stuff ...
I've grown Hot Stuff for a number of years. Can't now remember why I ever first bought the seed ... but I just plant & abandon them, as I don't need many of that chilli, and they always do very well.
The ones that I like to grow, a small hot chilli called Demon Red, I grow in the pots, they grow very slowly, and are much more fussy - but they are easy to give to chums as kitchen-harvester gifts come the Autumn :)
I'm cutting down on varieties this year to grow more flavour and less heat.
I have a lot of Tobago Seasoning in the propagator, hoping for bucketloads to make medium chilli sauce with a knockout habanero flavour. Probably the earliest of the seasoning/perfume varieties (and a bit hotter than "Trinidad Perfume") but still quite late.
A lot of Orange Mini Sweet (aka. chiquita) to provide a constant supply for salads - because they have more flavour than any other near-sweet pepper I've found (better than the other colours too) - and far too expensive to buy @ £7-8+ a kilo. I'm also sowing a larger version that tastes the same.
Smaller numbers of:
Bulgarian Teardrop for that citrus-and-guava/cat flavour when they are green.
Black Hungarian (my darkest selection) for ornament, earliness, yield, and good medium heat.
Cascabel for vigour and yield - you need a chainsaw to cut through the skin but they are lovely tasty mild-ish when it's flamed off.
Mulato Isleno (poblano/ancho) for some chocolate-coloured variation in salads and because red corno types have a habit of disappearing from my polytunnel.
A variegated version of Paprika Supreme - either it crossed with Fish or it's Fish in disguise (unlikely as I never got much more than flowers from Fish).
I've given up sowing Manzanos/Rocotos in Jan. - they rarely fruit well in the first year without ideal conditions (very fussy about shade), and they are so much easier to grow on from an April sowing and so easy to overwinter in 10cm pots @ 4C. I'm building up a stock of 2 and 3yr old plants anyway and they all take off so fast in March they leave every variety's new seedlings for dead. I'm usually picking right up to Xmas (have used them as pre-baubled Xmas trees on occasion). The fruit don't last long when coloured-up - the seeds go mouldy first and then the whole thing goes in a day - but they are brilliant if frozen quickly enough.
I used to overwinter Aji Dedo de Mocha reasonably well but a bit pointless as they rarely out-produced the new seedlings. A bit too thin-walled to be a good mild pepper anyway.
I did try Habanero Arbol which can live for decades in California reaching 2m or more, but previous year's plants started so ridiculously slowly in our spring they were not much more than an ornamental for the whole year.
I may choose some others if the current lot don't need re-sowing.
Cheers.
QuoteCascabel for vigour and yield - you need a chainsaw to cut through the skin but they are lovely tasty mild-ish when it's flamed off.
Oh...you are eating them fresh?! I've only ever used them as dried chillies to make paste or grind into powder. I wasn't going to sow any of them this year....but now that you mentioned them.. :BangHead:
In the propagater I've currently sown:
Madame Jeanette - chinense
Caribbean Red - chinense
Aji Amarillo - baccatum
Birgits locoto - baccatum
Black Hungarian - anuum
Numex Jalmundo - anuum
Jalapeño - anuum
Vampire F1 - anuum
Bulgarian Carrot - anuum
Rocoto Yellow - pubescens
Cherry Bomb - anuum
Will definitely grow out 6 of these in 1 and a half quadgrows and may grow out another 3 in a chiligrow, just depends on how much space is left in the greenhouse when the 2 quadgrows with tomatoes and 1 with sweet peppers are up and running as well.
Lots of old seed though, so germination is erratic hence why I've sown plenty of varieties to see what will come up! Unusually, both chinenses were first up within a week and only black Hungarian and cherry bomb have made an appearance since.
Right I have got my act together and I am just about to sow the first batch of the year.
First up is Loco (http://www.sowchillies.co.uk/chilli-seeds/loco-chilli-seeds/) - Just a little something for the window sill. Ornamental but still has some heat.
Then I have Trinidad 7 Pot Jonah (http://www.nickys-nursery.co.uk/garden-shop/seeds/chilli-seeds-by-type/chinense/peppers-chilli-trinidad-7-pot-jonah-10-seeds) for some silly heat and making sauces.
Followed by Aji Umba (http://www.nickys-nursery.co.uk/garden-shop/seeds/chilli-seeds-by-type/hot/peppers-chilli-aji-umba-habanero-type-10-seeds) - another hot one for salsa and sauces.
I am also trying Big Thai (http://www.nickys-nursery.co.uk/garden-shop/seeds/chilli-seeds-by-type/hot/peppers-chilli-big-thai-10-seeds) for the first time. Hopefully has some of the fragrance of the smaller ones - mainly for drying.
Prairie Fire (http://www.nickys-nursery.co.uk/garden-shop/seeds/patio-vegetable-seed/peppers-chilli-prairie-fire-10-seeds) has made the mix for eating from the plant - another Windowsill one for me.
Peter pepper (http://www.nickys-nursery.co.uk/garden-shop/seeds/chilli-seeds-by-type/medium/peppers-chilli-peter-pepper-red-10-seeds) - Mainly as they look rude and are a bit of fun
Lastly Bhut Jolokia (http://www.nickys-nursery.co.uk/garden-shop/seeds/chilli-seeds-by-type/chinense/peppers-chilli-bhut-jolokia) - Stupidly hot for surprising guests.
I'll probably only keep 2 of each and give a load away - should be plenty for me.