A lot of people wonder if seeds from dried pods bought from the grocery store are viable, so I tested a bunch this year. I had tried a few in the past and got mixed results, but that was outside in the summer and I didn't watch them too closely, didn't water very much, and didn't keep track of which was which. So this year I decided to do an experiment and took about 5 or 6 seeds of every store-bought dried pod I had on hand and tried germinating them, all but one variety germinated (New Mexico). Pequin, de arbol, puya, guajillo, ancho, japones, and cascabel all germinated at very high rates, I didn't keep track of percentages or germination times but the percentages and times were about the same or better than seeds from commercial seed vendors. So I'm guessing these are probably sun dried.
I'm not sure why the New Mexico seeds failed to germinate, maybe these were dried in ovens at high temperatures? The New Mexico pods are a different brand (Melissa/Don Enrique). The rest are all El Paisano I believe. I'm going to grow a few of them out and see if they grow true, probably de arbol, puya, pequin, and guajillo. I'm also germinating seeds from two brands of crushed red pepper to see which variety/varieties they use, one is Kroger and the other McCormick. Probably cayenne, de arbol, or some small hot frutescens or annum variety popular in India or Asia. I read an article by a guy who buys spices for McCormick in India, and it seems that they just buy large sacks of peppers from farmers at markets over there, so it's probably a mix of peppers and may not be consistently the same variety/varieties anyway. So hopefully I'll be able to grow some out and see what I get.
Hopefully someone will find this information useful.
I'm not sure why the New Mexico seeds failed to germinate, maybe these were dried in ovens at high temperatures? The New Mexico pods are a different brand (Melissa/Don Enrique). The rest are all El Paisano I believe. I'm going to grow a few of them out and see if they grow true, probably de arbol, puya, pequin, and guajillo. I'm also germinating seeds from two brands of crushed red pepper to see which variety/varieties they use, one is Kroger and the other McCormick. Probably cayenne, de arbol, or some small hot frutescens or annum variety popular in India or Asia. I read an article by a guy who buys spices for McCormick in India, and it seems that they just buy large sacks of peppers from farmers at markets over there, so it's probably a mix of peppers and may not be consistently the same variety/varieties anyway. So hopefully I'll be able to grow some out and see what I get.
Hopefully someone will find this information useful.