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zxcvbob 19-11-2011 03:46 AM

Chile Japones
 
I grew Chile de Arbol in my garden last year and was not impressed. The
fresh peppers were hot but had very little flavor and the yield wasn't
all that good (yield might be better in the South.) I might as well
just buy dried de arbols. Has anyone tried growing chile japones? Are
they good, or a waste of time?

BTW, fresh Tabasco peppers are awesome.

-Bob

Sister Gratuitous Violets 19-11-2011 10:42 AM

Chile Japones
 
On 19/11/2011 10:55 AM, Mark Thorson wrote:
zxcvbob wrote:

I grew Chile de Arbol in my garden last year and was not impressed. The
fresh peppers were hot but had very little flavor and the yield wasn't
all that good (yield might be better in the South.) I might as well
just buy dried de arbols. Has anyone tried growing chile japones? Are
they good, or a waste of time?


I used to eat both dried Japanese chilis and
arbol chilis a lot, and I never noticed much
difference except the arbol chilis were longer.
A Hispanic checker where I bought them insisted
arbol chilis are hotter, but I never noticed
that. It is true that the Japanese prefer
mild chilis, and use them mostly for flavor.

I've heard that growing conditions strongly
affect flavor, in particularly hotter conditions
are alleged to result in hotter chilis, but
I've never successfully grown chilis.


Nobody has ever successfully grown chilli.

Mark Thorson 19-11-2011 06:55 PM

Chile Japones
 
zxcvbob wrote:

I grew Chile de Arbol in my garden last year and was not impressed. The
fresh peppers were hot but had very little flavor and the yield wasn't
all that good (yield might be better in the South.) I might as well
just buy dried de arbols. Has anyone tried growing chile japones? Are
they good, or a waste of time?


I used to eat both dried Japanese chilis and
arbol chilis a lot, and I never noticed much
difference except the arbol chilis were longer.
A Hispanic checker where I bought them insisted
arbol chilis are hotter, but I never noticed
that. It is true that the Japanese prefer
mild chilis, and use them mostly for flavor.

I've heard that growing conditions strongly
affect flavor, in particularly hotter conditions
are alleged to result in hotter chilis, but
I've never successfully grown chilis.

Dave Smith[_2_] 20-11-2011 05:08 PM

Chile Japones
 
On 19/11/2011 5:42 AM, Sister Gratuitous Violets wrote:


I've heard that growing conditions strongly
affect flavor, in particularly hotter conditions
are alleged to result in hotter chilis, but
I've never successfully grown chilis.


Nobody has ever successfully grown chilli.


Somebody must be growing them. I just got back from the grocery sotre
and there were some for sale.

spamtrap1888 20-11-2011 08:03 PM

Chile Japones
 
On Nov 18, 7:46*pm, zxcvbob wrote:
I grew Chile de Arbol in my garden last year and was not impressed. The
fresh peppers were hot but had very little flavor and the yield wasn't
all that good (yield might be better in the South.) *I might as well
just buy dried de arbols. *Has anyone tried growing chile japones? Are
they good, or a waste of time?

BTW, fresh Tabasco peppers are awesome.


Have you been successful with other chili peppers in your garden? Was
this a normal growing season for you, or extra cool, extra rainy, etc.?

zxcvbob 20-11-2011 08:26 PM

Chile Japones
 
spamtrap1888 wrote:
On Nov 18, 7:46 pm, zxcvbob wrote:
I grew Chile de Arbol in my garden last year and was not impressed. The
fresh peppers were hot but had very little flavor and the yield wasn't
all that good (yield might be better in the South.) I might as well
just buy dried de arbols. Has anyone tried growing chile japones? Are
they good, or a waste of time?

BTW, fresh Tabasco peppers are awesome.


Have you been successful with other chili peppers in your garden? Was
this a normal growing season for you, or extra cool, extra rainy, etc.?



Not the growing season that just ended a few weeks ago, the year before
that. The other chiles did OK -- and these did too but just weren't
worth the trouble. There's not much meat on a de arbol pepper, and it
didn't have much taste except hot, and the heat was not really
extraordinary.

-Bob

echinosum 21-11-2011 02:21 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by zxcvbob (Post 942101)
I grew Chile de Arbol in my garden last year and was not impressed. The
fresh peppers were hot but had very little flavor and the yield wasn't
all that good (yield might be better in the South.)

If you like chilli that are hot, fleshy and flavoursome, try rocoto. Colloquially known as tree chilli, but quite different from de arbol. They are more cold tolerant than other chillis, so can be more successful in an indifferent growing season than other kinds. I've been very happy with mine, grown out of doors in southern England.


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