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Peppers, ripe, or not?

Sorry for the weird title... just i had a thought as I have been growing peppers... which peppers do you wait for them to ripen and change colors, vs not? Like, i know bell peppers are used and eaten usually before they change colors, habaneros are better when they do change colors, as I am sure is the case with most of the hots and superhots. Serranos, I dont know. Then again, although I have a huge serrano plant that is producing like crazy, I am not even sure if I really like them. Sorry, kind of random thinking, just woke up and all.
 
While there are peppers that appear favorable unripe (jalapeno comes to mind mostly), there is no right or wrong time, generally you WOULD wait for your peppers to ripen unless you prefer otherwise.
 
I pretty much let them all ripen, even varieties like jalapenos and serranos that are usually eaten green. Unless I'm going to use them for a specific purpose like salsa verde, in which I want the green fruit, I let them ripen. I like the flavor of ripe jalapenos a lot more than green generally, but it depends on the application.
 
I always like to eat a green pod on plants I am growing for the first time. Then try one when it is ripe and go from there! Most always I prefer ripe over green! :onfire:
 
Really it's a personal preference. For example, I much prefer ripe bell peppers over green ones. I suggest you let one ripen on each plant, then pluck both it and a green one, and give them both a try. YOU are the only person qualified to determine your preference!
 
Well , I did eat some ripe serranos yesterday and some green ones.... ripe has a nice flavor... nice and sweet, but also hot. I was *this* close to cutting down that plant, but decided against it.. nice and tall, big producer.
 
Tabasco is the only pepper I pick unripe, and I grab it at its yellowish-green stage instead of the later orange or red-ripe stage. Four reasons:

-They have a sharp, powerful--too powerful, IMO--taste while red and ripe. The riper they get, the stronger this is. They are best somewhere around the end of their green stage and progressively get worse as they turn past orange.
-They have a nice, steady burn while still young. I've ate some red ones that were some serious firebombs, but it's a quick heat that just dissipates too fast. The less ripe ones seem to have a more lasting effect.
-They take FOREVER to ripen. Seriously, I get hardly any fully red-ripe peppers off these things. It's a waste to try. These peppers just don't seem to want to ripen in my climate... they seem to be more suited to climates closer to the equator. I've rarely had major problems with peppers ripening so far, but when I do, it's always tabasco. So I give up on letting them ripen.
-Once fully red and ripe, they quickly turn the mush. They just don't seem to last, and with the time required to get them to this stage... it just seems pointless to ripen them fully.

Jalapenos, Scotch bonnets, habaneros, other C. chinenses, C. baccatums, Rocotos... I let them all fully ripen so far with no problems. Some ripen slower than others, but I've yet to see such poor ripening times as the tabasco. I even typically leave them on the plant for up to a whole week to make sure they're as ripe as possible (yes, at the expense of heat; a small number of capsaicinoids converted to sugar is not a bad thing to me).

The way I see it... the riper, the better. Usually. The fully-developed sweetness and overall flavor is important to me... not just the searing heat.
 
I pick all peppers ripe except for JalapeƱos (as I prefer them green - fresh) Anaheims (as I prefer them green - roasted) and some Scotch Bonnets, as surprisingly enough... they are even more flavorful at their last moments before ripening.
 
...some Scotch Bonnets, as surprisingly enough... they are even more flavorful at their last moments before ripening.

And which SB's might those be? I've been wondering about a couple of mine. There's SB flavor but no where near as "in your face" as I would like.
 
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