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When to pick a pepper

I've said before maximum heat is at maturity when the color starts to change.


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If you like your peppers hot, don't pick them before or after their time. A new chemistry analysis confirms that the amount of hot flavor in the pepper is determined by how long the pepper has been growing before it is harvested, according to a report in the May 20 Web edition of the Journal of Agricultural & Food Chemistry, published by the American Chemical Society, the world's largest scientific society. And waiting too long may be as bad as picking them too soon, the researcher says, since the peak of flavor is short-lived and precisely timed. For Piquin peppers, the critical growing time to insure peak flavor is 40 days, and for De árbol and Habañero peppers it's 50 days, says Elhadi M. Yahia of the Universidad Autónoma de Querétaro in Querétaro, Mexico.

The hot flavor of chile peppers is caused by the presence of a group of seven closely-related compounds called capsaicinoids. Although these compounds are present throughout the life of the pepper, the amount increases as the pepper matures until a maximum is reached, and then decreases rapidly, according to Yahia. The degradation of the capsaicinoids is caused by naturally-occurring compounds called peroxidases. Yahia and Margarita Conteras-Padilla measured the concentrations of both capsaicinoids and peroxidases as different pepper plants aged. "If we can understand how capsaicinoids break down, this could be a first step in reducing these losses for those cultures where chile peppers are of great importance," Yahia says.

A nonprofit organization with a membership of more than 155,000 chemists and chemical engineers, the American Chemical Society publishes scientific journals, convenes major research conferences, and provides educational and career programs in chemistry. Its main offices are in Washington, D.C., and Columbus Ohio.
 
When do you start counting the days? I would think this # would vary depending on the growing conditions.
 
telc said:
When do you start counting the days? I would think this # would vary depending on the growing conditions.


Yeah, the precision in that kind of bugged me. Besides which, I don't write down the day every single flower gets pollinated. Only Alabama Jack does that.
 
I knew there was a reason for me keeping all this data....roflmao
 
I will post the link tonight; I got it bookmarked at home.

The other researches I've read basically say when the pod is mature and at the turning point (when color start to change) is when the pepper is at it's peak.
I believe this is even truer with habanero, they have a wonderfully different taste and burn then a full ripped pod JMO. But to be honest I find a fully ripped pod much more interesting and attractive …

The exact number of days sounds somewhat crazy to me.
 
Pam said:
Yeah, the precision in that kind of bugged me. Besides which, I don't write down the day every single flower gets pollinated. Only Alabama Jack does that.

:fire: hehe Thats funny Pam

pablo
 
What Pablo....you don't log every single event?....... :lol: I hear a lady bug *poot* and logged the date, time, aroma, humidity, temperature, barometric pressure, phase of the moon, what the tides were doing....
 
AlabamaJack said:
What Pablo....you don't log every single event?....... :lol: I hear a lady bug *poot* and logged the date, time, aroma, humidity, temperature, barometric pressure, phase of the moon, what the tides were doing....



I bet some people here think you're kidding, too.
 
Lord, this is the explication of the bloody obvious.....if you want ripe, picante chiles, don't pick them until they are ripe and picante.
 
AlabamaJack said:
What Pablo....you don't log every single event?....... :lol: I hear a lady bug *poot* and logged the date, time, aroma, humidity, temperature, barometric pressure, phase of the moon, what the tides were doing....

oh my - you make me feel very inadequate due to my distinct lack of record keeping
 
willard3 said:
Lord, this is the explication of the bloody obvious.....if you want ripe, picante chiles, don't pick them until they are ripe and picante.

willard, i think the point of the article was to say that when it is 'ripe' is not the ideal time necessarily for 'picante' that it is right before it turns 'ripe' while it is still changing color is when they say it is most 'picante'. not that i am saying they are right or wrong, just think read it the wrong way maybe.
 
chilliman64 said:
oh my - you make me feel very inadequate due to my distinct lack of record keeping



Well, c'mon over and join the rest of us on the "AJ makes us feel inadequate" bench.



I think he needed to drink more beer.
 
Pam said:
Well, c'mon over and join the rest of us on the "AJ makes us feel inadequate" bench.



I think he needed to drink more beer.

make a space

the best time to pick your pepper depends on what you want to do with it I guess - at the early colour change for max heat or full maturity for seed. most of mine are picked at first colour change or just after and allowed to ripen further indoors. as I grow mainly chinenses I really like the flavour and aroma of matured fruit - the heat is a bonus!
 
You know, about August, I'm just frantically picking, screw this peak of ripeness stuff! I don't have time to examine each pepper loving for the perfect blend of color and green. That time of year, even when I'm weeding, I'm picking peppers I notice low on the plants and stuffing them in my pockets.

I even have weeding shorts. They're men's sleeping boxer shorts type things I get at Walmart because they have the *biggest* pockets, and they're made of t-shirt material, so the pockets even stretch.
 
POTAWIE said:
Pockets full of green jalapenos? Not.:lol:

Green? As in unripe? Have you lost your mind? They may have a wee bit green around the shoulders or tip, but unripe?

ew


Besides, I usually don't grow jalapeños, I have pocket's full of Chocolate habs and Hidalgos and Lemon Drops and Pimiento De Chieros and Bhut Jolokias, and, and, and whatever else is out there.

A word of warning, if you're going to fill the pockets of those shorts with tomatoes, tie the string in the waistband really, really tight. Or make sure neighbors don't mind the occasional mooning.

Not that that ever happened to me, no, no, no. I'm just, you know, saying.
 
better look out Pam, you will have tha paparazzi taking pictures from high up in pine trees through telephoto lenses..

I can just see it on the front page of the Enquirer..."Curious Minds Want To Know"
 
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