Streamer said:I haven't grown but one type of cayenne...and that turned me off. Too papery texture to enjoy raw. Maybe I had a crappo variety. I'm all ears for one that tastes fantastic. I mean with some flavor. Til now, I've only used them for drying.
I'm waiting on someone to tell me the best type they have tasted with a short description of flavor profile.
This will be the only way I ever grow cayenne again.
Is there a particular variety you prefer?Swartmamba said:i use birds eyes or peri peri when ever recipes call for cayenne, better flavour and double the heat
AaronTT said:Is there a particular variety you prefer?
Yeah, they do look pretty bad ass, and prolific. Have you tasted them yet?JJJessee said:I don't care how they taste.
I'll grow these next year because they look so badass.
PS: that spelling may be off a letter or two and 2/24/14 should be 6/24/14
Okay, I will have to look into this cultivar. I have found that one of the most painful peppers I have eaten was some form of bird's eye chili. While the Bhut jolokia was more hot up front, I found this unknown birds eye chili to cause the most amount of pain. The Bhut's pain was finished in shortly less than ten minutes, while this unknown birds eye kept my mouth on fire for almost a hour.Swartmamba said:
Yeah south african or zimbabwe peri-peri (pili-pili)
But I thought cayennes were supposed to be around 30-40,000 shu which is nothing to sneeze at for most people.