They look like lovely healthy plantsPaper Lantern, Thai Dragon, Cayenne and Annaheim. I didn't put any Aji Limon in as there is still loads left over in the freezer from last year. To date I usually boil em, mash em and put them in a blender but after reading the thread about fermenting I shall have a bash at it this year. As others have posted once the Xmas presents have been opened its propogation time here up north.
Now that’s what I’m hoping forFirst post on this thread. Very pleased to report some success growing Thai chillies from seed!
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Back in December/January my better half ordered a load of ingredients from an online Thai supermarket (green papaya, chillies, fresh lime leaves ect). Anyways, after cooking with the red Thai chillies we ended up with a leftover chilli that nearly ended up in the compost. For a laugh I thought I’d try and propagate the seeds and here we are several months later with four plants in the polytunnel and one on our kitchen windowsill!
First meal with them tonight- Kung pao chicken
My favourite "all-round" chilli!Paper Lantern,
What a great pepper. I've never bothered with 'vegetable' chillies particularly, but that does provide a bit of inspirationI picked my first Draky at the weekend. It's big!
We ate it sliced in two and stuffed with cheese, tomato and onion. The flesh is fruity and has no heat at all. The heat is in the seeds so a couple of those mixed in gives it the desired leg-up if you see what I mean.
I would very much advocate the pick as they ripen approach. I read a study back along that suggested that you get a better overall yield that way. If you pick more than you can consume (which is very likely!) just bung them in the freezer. I'm still using last season's chillies having stored them this way.Do you tend to pick chillies as and when they are ready, or wait and try to pick the whole plant in one go? Pros and cons of different approaches? I’m a first timer as I’ve said before so not sure what to do, but I have some apaches which definitely look ready though there are plenty more on the plant still small and green
I would very much advocate the pick as they ripen approach. I read a study back along that suggested that you get a better overall yield that way. If you pick more than you can consume (which is very likely!) just bung them in the freezer. I'm still using last season's chillies having stored them this way.
There are loads of different varieties of jalapeno, but the green ones are picked before they fully ripen to get that fresh 'green' flavour. Same reason some bell peppers are harvested greenThanks. First four picked!
Question re Jalapeños. When you see them in the shops they are normally green, does this mean they are just picked commercially before they turn red or are they a different variety? If they just pick them that way, is there a reason?
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