"an book"?chilliman64 said:yes you can. according to an book I have at home, they are eaten in the Phillippines as a leafy vegetable but I can't verify that from first hand experience, only from reading. apparently most solanaceous plants (tomatoes, peppers, potatoes, tobacco are solanaceous) have alkaloids in sufficiently high levels in their leaves but peppers do not.
maybe philipperv can advise on this one...
rainbowberry said:Well they don't harm my dog.
Reviving an OLD question.
The cats in my house won't touch the leaves on my pepper plants, but they chew up any other green plant.... devil animals....! Possibly because there is trace capsaicin in the plant itself? Kitties hate spice. They won't come near me after I've been chopping up peppers.
The thought of a hot pepper leaf salad has crossed my mind, but doing so would impead the growth of the peppers themself, so why do it!?
yes you can. according to an book I have at home, they are eaten in the Phillippines as a leafy vegetable but I can't verify that from first hand experience, only from reading. apparently most solanaceous plants (tomatoes, peppers, potatoes, tobacco are solanaceous) have alkaloids in sufficiently high levels in their leaves but peppers do not.
maybe philipperv can advise on this one...