Ancho and Jalapeño peppers |
Saturday, September 18, 2021
My peppers kick into high gear come September. They seem to love the lower humidity and cooler nights. Peppers originated in the mountains of Mexico so September into October are perfect weather conditions for peppers.
Nikita hybrid sweet pepper |
Surprisingly, even though peppers originated in the tropics and subtropics of South America, peppers don’t like extremely hot weather. They get sunburned when the temps get into the 90’s consistently. Their sunburn looks like dark spots on the exposed fruits. If you can, move them into the shade when temps are extreme. They won’t croak, but they are stressed during periods of high heat.
Summer garden tips
Peppers like sulfur, calcium (to protect from blossom end rot), magnesium (helps flowers make fruits), sulfur (makes more nutritious pepper) and phosphorous (for flowering). You can use the same fertilizer as you do for tomatoes; both encourage healthy fruit growth.
Be careful with the nitrogen. Nitrogen promotes greenery. You will end up with beautiful, lush plants with no flowers or fruits. Also be careful in the type of potting soil you buy if planting in pots to make sure they are not for green leaved plants, but for flowers or vegetables.
Right now, I have Poblano/Ancho peppers, Chipetin (an ancient super hot pepper), cayenne, Super Red Pimento and a snacking size red sweet pepper, growing in pots. I preserve all that I don't use fresh. Preserving peppers
The Poblano/Ancho and Anaheim I use to dry for chili powder. The sweet peppers I don't eat fresh, I rough slice and freeze for salsa. I have plenty of frozen hot Jalapeños from last year so didn't plant any this year. I use Jalapeños and cayenne peppers for spicy salsa. I also put Jalapeños in apple cider vinegar to ferment for hot sauce for wings for football games. After about 4 weeks, I put them through the food processor and my hot sauce is ready to use! You can use any hot pepper. Homemade hot sauce wings with homegrown celery
Homemade hot sauce |
Yum! Yum!
If you smoke your Jalapeño peppers, you will get Chipotle seasoning. I have smoked some Jalapeños, dried them and ground them up to make Chipotle powder for seasoning dishes and chili. Or you can add natural smoke flavor to the pepper before drying to get that smoky flavor after dehydrated.
The heat of the pepper is in the ribs and seeds. If you like spicy, be sure to keep these. When handling spicy peppers, it is a good idea to wear gloves and be careful to not rub your eyes, nose or mouth until you wash your hands thoroughly.
You can also save the seeds and plant in next year's garden. Just be sure to let them dry before you put them in an air tight container so they don't mold. I store my seeds in ziplocks in the frig and they last for years. Seed saving-fun, easy and a cost saver
Pimento peppers |
I grow most of our peppers in pots. I try to grow enough peppers to last us all winter for chili, salsa and salads. The hot peppers like Jalapeños and Cayenne seem to do best in pots. The Pimentos were average producers in the ground. I have grown them in pots in the past and there doesn’t seem to be much difference in production. The sweet peppers do well in pots. The Poblano was grown in the garden and the Anaheim in the ground. Both produced well. I grow all my peppers in pots unless I run out of pots, then they go in the ground. Peppers are for every taste and garden
If you had plants that did extremely well, peppers are tropical perennials. You can simply bring them inside for the winter. They will continue to produce through January indoors. When you put them back outside in the spring, you will be the first on the block with homegrown peppers! If you decide bringing indoors is too much of a hassle or you don’t have the space, save the seeds from the best fruit of the plant so you can propagate next year. Hybrids will not grow true to seed so you will either have to overwinter or buy a new plant or seeds in the spring. You can try the seed, but the offspring typically does not turn out with the same traits as the parent. What do the terms GMO, natural, heirloom, organic, hybrid really mean?
A friend shared with me that he thought he was going to give up trying to grow vegetables because all he got was pretty plants with no fruits. He was growing them in pots.
My suggestion-don’t give up! Since you are doing a great job with greenery, go for vegetables that are leafy, like lettuce, broccoli, cabbage, herbs, chard, and other greens. Now is a great time to replant with these type of plants.
On the other hand, if you get all greenery and no fruit and your plant is in full sun, the most likely culprit is too much nitrogen fertilizer. This can happen to any fruiting plant. I fertilize once a month with an organic fertilizer and typically one for tomatoes as they are made with the nutrients fruiting plants need.
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