PaulG said:
Can not help much with the yellow variety, but
the red JA Mushroom is an awesome pepper.
Excellent flavor with mild to medium heat.
Here is a
picture of some of last season's
late harvest.
The original seed for this strain came from Jamaica
via WalkGood.
Paul, i have no idea how i missed your post yesterday. Oops.
Your peppers look rad. The more i dig into these, the more i want to grow them. I'm a bit more stoked on the Yella version, but reds are probably awesome too.
ShowMeDaSauce said:
The ones i grew were not chinense. They were an annuum for sure or possibly a hybrid. I could not taste or smell any of the chinense funk at all. They were damn hot for a annuum and the flavor was really good. Very thin walled.
The one i got was called Jamaican Gold from CCN.
Yeah, the senillas.de site purposes these are a chinense x annuum hybrid, and I've seen them referred a such before. Some sites list them as just chinense; others as just annuums. I've seen more than one site seeking then "Scotch Bonnets." Baker's does; it's embarrassing. I've never tried them, but looking both the calyx and the plants' structure, or is clear that they are annuums or at least part annuum. I think the high SHUs and the origins/appearance have led ppl to assume since chinense heritage. I'm over here repeating oft-echoed internet rumors, but i will reserve judgment until after I've eaten/grown them.
I recall seeing them listed as "Jamaican Gold" at CCN (CCN closed down! Wtf?) But it seems like lots of different names for this type, or maybe they're actually different types?
The_NorthEast_ChileMan said:
Yeah definitely. You get a of hits of you search then under the other names, too...
BlackFatalii said:
I had a chance to try both the red and yellow versions this year. I thought the yellow was maybe a little milder and fruitier tasting than the red. Both of them had a pretty nice, sweet annuum taste with a hint of fruitiness and a pretty respectable burn for an annuum. They were actually a bit warmer than I had expected based on the reviews I had seen. I liked them both, and I think they could be worth growing for their nice sweet flavor and cool shapes. They didn't really taste like a Bonnet or any other chinense to me though. Just a nice sweet annuum taste for both of them. They are also super easy to deseed, since the seeds are all right at the top of the pod and can be easily removed together with the calyx.
And Bike, your inbox is full.
Yeah, I'm definitely interested in trying them. I've read opinions that they taste like Bonnets, but those of you on this thread that have had them seen to disagree, by and large. Personally, i hope they don't, bc i grow a ridiculously large number of Bonnets each year. But, if they end up tasting like Bonnets, i could dig that too. Obviously, i love the taste of Scotch Bonnets.
I gotta fix my inbox. On my phone now, and i don't think i can delete messages from here. I'll have to get on my laptop. Thanks for the heads-up!
Chorizo857_62J said:
I have a couple of plants producing pods like that, and some with different forms. Most of the plants were grown from farmers market pods from which I kept seeds. Who knows what was in that woodshed.
Growing mysterious seeds of dubious pedigree can be fun. I personally had a blast just allowing some of my volunteers to grow out. The mysteries are low-level exciting. Definitely had a few crosses, and my volunteer Serrano plants outgrew and outproduced the Serranos i started indoors, so....