Showing posts with label wax. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wax. Show all posts

Tuesday, 21 August 2012

Hoping for an Indian Summer

There's plenty of fruit beginning to set on the chillies but we still need sun to get it ripen. So, a little more sunshine would be greatly appreciated.
Loco
Padron
I manged to blow my head off with a plateful of Padrons the other day.  I endured a searing heat that had my eyes watering, nose running and about 20 minutes of stomach cramps.

Damn tasty though!

What is supposed to be a mild, sweet chilli with a 10% chance of being hot seems to consistently produce scorchingly hot fruit.  It's not just my plants either - the Padron plants that I gave to Claudio produce similarly hot fruit (although his chillies are significantly larger than mine).
Twilight
Hungarian Hot Wax
Yellow Scotch Bonnet
The Red Scotch Bonnet plant is beginning to set fruit as well although it's about a month behind its yellow cousin. Moving the plants outside has certainly slowed them down but with the windowsills overloaded and the constant aphid attacks, it was the best solution.

Explosive Ember
Explosive ember is a very pretty ornamental chilli with deep purple leaves and fruit.  It's a much more compact bush than the similarly coloured Orozco and I suspect would be better suited to a windowsill rather than Orozco's spreading habit.

Balloon
I'm gearing up to a chilli jam making session this weekend so I'm hoping for a few more fruit to ripen to add to the stockpile in the freezer. Hopefully I'll have enough to make a couple of batches of jam at different heats depending on people's bravery and spice tolerance.

Friday, 10 August 2012

Slow progress...

...it really is! Slowly the chillies are growing, slowly they're ripening but it takes the patience of a saint waiting for a decent crop.

For the forthcoming nuptials (yes, I'm getting hitched in a scarily-close five-weeks time) I've purchased a box full of miniature jam-jars and bottles to fill with chilli-related goodness. However, with the rate at which chillies are ripening in the inconsistent sunshine, I may be struggling to fill them all.


Thankfully, Claudio (the father-in-law to-be) has a regular production line of scorchingly hot Padron chillies on the go so I may have to make a special Galiciaian ex-pat sauce in his honour.

Padrons are supposed to be small, green and mild.  Not the way Claudio grows them!
However, all is not lost yet. The yellow scotch bonnet plant is doing well with half a dozen large fruit beginning to ripen. I'm particularly proud of this one as I grew it from seed rescued from a chilli bought at Sainsbury's. How's that for value for money, I got a tasty Carribean meal and a chilli plant for less than the cost of a packet of seeds!

The distinctive ribbed shape of the  Scotch Bonnet
I've had some success with my own Padrons with a steady supply of fruit. However, the superhots are still to make much of a showing with only flowers on the Black Nagas and not even any open flowers on the Chocolate Habaneros.
A reasonable crop of (slightly smaller) Padrons
It would appear that the mystery chilli seeds given to me by a colleague (previously referred to as 'Gino Chillies') are in all likelihood either Ballon or Friar's Hat. Now the plant has fruited it displays a healthy crop of the distinctive tricorn fruits.
Gino's chillies
Friar's Hat
Many of the other plants, particularly the Hungarian Hot Wax and the Cayennes have a good stock of green fruit, we're just waiting for the sun to give them a but of a boost and ripen them up in time for some wedding-themed hot sauces and jams.
Hungarian Hot Wax
Hungarian Hot Wax
The Loco plants are still producing a steady crop of small fruit
Cayenne
The late TrinidadScorpion, De Arbol and Cappa Conic seedings are thriving on the windowsill.

Sunday, 22 July 2012

The sun has got his hat on

With the ongoing attacks from aphids I've been forced to move most of the chilies outdoors.  Whilst this deters the sap-sucking blighters, it's not done a lot to encourage the plants to flower or fruit. With the wettest April/May/June/July on record it's been a disastrous year for the garden with slugs demolishing anything that isn't washed away in the torrential downpours.

However, we're reliably assured that the jet-stream has now shifted and summer has begun at last. And, as I sit typing this, I can see sunshine through the window and, you never know, the forecasters might be right for once.

So, camera in hand, I've ventured out into the garden once more to record the somewhat limited progress of the Chilli Forest

It's certainly looking more forest-like these days.
There's about 15 different varieties of chilli in this photo alone.

Inferno - taken a while to ripen but now looking good.

Orozco flowers
Ancho Poblano 
Hungarian Carrot 
The Padrons are going strong now they've acclimatised to the outdoors.
Purple Jalapeno - Been a disappointing season for them with many plants amounting to nothing but this one at least has a few fruit to show for its troubles.
Yellow Scotch Bonnet - Good crop on this plant, grown from seed saved from a chilli bought in the supermarket
Big Jim - Three large fruit on such a small plant has left it somewhat unbalanced on the windowsill.
A modest harvest this week - Loco, Friar's Hat, Superchilli, Chilhaucle Negro, Hungarian Hot Wax and Black Hungarian.

Thursday, 28 June 2012

The photo edition

 For a change I thought I would ditch the compact camera and actually take some proper photos with a macro lens. So here's a few shots of some of the various chillies on the go at the moment, flowers, fruit and foliage.
Flowers on the rare superhot Black Nagas, whether the fruit is truly black remains to be seen.
Tiny fruit and flowers on the ornamental Prairie Fire.
Purple Jalapeno  
Explosive Ember
New Mex Centennial
Cayenne
Cayenne
Scotch Bonnet
Aphid Attack!
Greenfly is a constant problem, particularly for those plants grown on the windowsill.  The heat and lack of humidity are perfect conditions for these sap suckers.  Putting the plants outside will help slow the aphids but sometimes the infestation is so bad that the only resort is the dreaded pesticide.  Fortunately there are organic pesticides that will still allow you to harvest the fruit within several days of spraying.
Superchilli
Superchilli
The Superchilli is a real standout plant, producing mounds of hot red fruits.  Sadly I gave most of mine away this year but it's a plant that I'll definitely overwinter and sow more next year.

This unusual fruit is actually a Padron pepper.  Not only is it the wrong size but also the wrong shape.  I suspect that it's a cross-breed with the Chilhuacle Negro plant next to it.
Chilhuacle Negro
Hungarian Hot Wax
Black Hungarian (in the rain). 
Loco
A healthy crop of Friar's Hat chillies.  It's important to keep picking the fruit to encourage the plant to put out more flowers.
Orozco's beautiful leaves 
A two-tone leaf on the Orozco plant

Tuesday, 22 May 2012

That night a forest grew...

Well it finally stopped raining and the sun came out and dried up the aforementioned rain and the garden sprung to life.  Those chillies that have been slowly growing on the plants for what seemed like an age have ripened and I've even been brave enough to put some of the hardier chillies outside to enjoy the sunshine.
The chillies in the growhouse are springing to life
Certain plants are racing ahead of the field, Loco is covered in small chillies and the Superchilli is living up to its name with an incredible crop of small pointed chillies.
Loco
A dense mass of flowers on the Superchilli
Superchilli fruit
Some of the plants are taking longer than others to get their act together, the slow growing Scotch Bonnets, Chocolate Habaneros and Nagas have yet to show any sign of flowers although they have made a growth spurt in the unfamiliar sunshine.
Hungarian Hot Wax
Cayenne
As for the Jiffy 7 pellet trial, it was a huge success with all bar one of the pellets resulting in a seeding.  I've potted them on into party cups and they seems to be doing well on the windowsill. 


Meanwhile the Pasilla Bajio and Orozco seeds that had been grown in the small peat pots have been potted on and added to the rapidly expanding forest in the growhouses.  With space at a premium it won't be long before, once again, I'm looking for some new homes for some of the plants.

Potting on in the sunshine
Trays of Orozco, Pasilla Bajio and Moroccan chillies.