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James H. Schutte
(Cherry Pepper, Cherry Pick Pepper)
The bulbous sweet pepper,'Cherry Pick', produces abundant cherry-shaped, green fruits about 68 days after planting. The fruits turn from green to red and are sweet and tasty at either stage. This bushy, disease resistant selection stays compact, so it's perfect for container culture.
All peppers are annuals or short-lived perennials native to the tropical Americas. They can be grown year round as long as growing conditions are warm and moisture available. The bushy plants have simple green leaves...
Jessie Keith
(Bulgarian Sweet Pepper, Chervena Chushka Pepper)
The Bulgarian heirloom pepper 'Chervena Chushka' produces sweet, flavorful fruits on large vigorous plants. It is also noted for its tolerance of cool, damp summers.
First cultivated and selected by Native Americans thousands of years ago, peppers are bushy, brittle-stemmed annual vegetables with thin oval leaves and small five-petaled flowers. The dull-white blooms of 'Chervena Chushka' are followed by conical, 6-inch-long (15-cm) fruits that ripen from dark green to brown to bright red. The...
Jesse Saylor
(Chilly Chili Ornamental Chile, Ornamental Chili Pepper)
The slender, showy fruits of 'Chilly Chili' look hot, but their flavor is mild. A 2002 All-America Selections award winner, this ornamental chili pepper is one of numerous members of the Longum group, which encompasses poblanos, serranos, jalapenos, cayenne peppers and various other chilis. These annual vegetables descend from varieties that were grown and selected by Native Americans for thousands of years.
The bushy, compact plants bear small, oval, dark green leaves on stiff brittle stems....
James H. Schutte
(Chinese Five Color Ornamental Chile, Ornamental Chili Pepper)
The fiery hot and appealingly colorful fruits of the cone pepper ‘Chinese Five Color’ are both beautiful and edible. The plants are upright and produce moderately-sized, erect, conical peppers that appear singly, not in clusters. The very hot fruits start out purple and progress to cream, yellow, orange and finally red when mature. Ornamental peppers are generally edible, but care must be taken with plants grown at nurseries for ornamental purposes; they may have been treated with pesticides or other...
(Bell Pepper, Chocolate Beauty Pepper)
Gourmet gardeners need to grow 'Chocolate Beauty' sweet bell peppers for their looks as well as flavor. Resistant to tobacco mosaic virus, these peppers produce high-quality fruits ideal for fresh eating as well as cooking. Harvest-ready peppers are produced about 85 days after planting. The smooth-skinned, blocky fruits are milk chocolate brown with dark mahogany-red undertones. They taste sweet and non-pungent as long as they are fully ripe.
Native to tropical America, these annuals had been...
National Garden Bureau
(Bell Pepper, Classic Pepper)
This Sakata seed introduction is resistant to bacterial leaf spot and bears loads of large, blocky fruits that turn from green to red. Green fruits can be harvested in 70 to 80 days after planting and sweeten up and turn deep red another three weeks later. The tasty peppers have an extra long shelf life and are perfect for roasting.
Native to tropical America, these annuals had been grown and selected by Native Americans since pre-history times. In fact, their specific region of origin is still...
James H. Schutte
(Bell Pepper, Sweet Pepper)
The name ‘Colossal’ says it all; this is one huge pepper! This is a high-performing pepper that bears giant crunchy sweet bell pepper fruits that ripen from green to medium red. Peppers are produced around 70 days after planting. The plants are large too and high-yielding.
Native to tropical America, bell peppers are annuals or short-lived perennials that were grown and selected for millenia by Native Americans. Their specific region of origin is still unknown due to distribution by man. Peppers...
James H. Schutte
(Corno di Toro Rosso Pepper, Italian Sweet Pepper)
The name of this vigorous, tall-growing Italian heirloom pepper translates to "red bull's horn", after the shape and color of its fruits. The fruits resemble oversized chili peppers, but they are sweet-flavored and free of "heat."
Peppers are bushy, brittle-stemmed annual vegetables that were first cultivated and selected by Native Americans thousands of years ago. Like all cultivated peppers, 'Corno Di Toro Rosso' has thin, oval leaves, and produces inconspicuous white flowers in warm weather....
Nancy Engel
(Bell Pepper, Cubanelle Pepper, Sweet Pepper)
An early sweet Italian frying pepper, 'Cubanelle' produces delicious slender fruits. Harvest-ready peppers are produced 65 to 75 days after planting. The long fruits can be picked and eaten when still light green but eventually ripen to bright orange-red. The immature peppers have a fresh, sweet, green flavor and the mature peppers have a deeper, sweeter taste. These thin-skinned peppers have relatively low water content, making them superb for frying or roasting.
Native to tropical America,...
James Burghardt
(Bell Pepper, Sweet Pepper)
The long, broad cultivation history of the pepper best explains why its fruits come in a myriad of forms tastes and colors, whether they are big or small, hot or sweet, red or yellow.
Native to tropical America, these annuals have been grown and selected by Native Americans since pre-history times. In fact, their specific region of origin is still unknown due to distribution by man. Peppers became available to Europeans when the new and old worlds connected. Since then, many unique selections...