August 20, 2018

Harvest Monday, 8/20/18

I picked a bunch of sweet peppers last week. We mainly grew sweet peppers this year with the only spicy peppers being jalapenos and poblanos, although Shishito and Padron peppers can get fiery hot as they ripen in our climate.
The dark red top-shaped peppers on top are Odessa and the orangey red top-shaped pepper on the bottom is Feher Ozon. I have to admit, the Odessa peppers are much sweeter than the Feher Ozon pepper which has a sour-ish end note. I've only eaten them raw, and perhaps Feher needs to ripen longer.
Of the long peppers, Melrose is a shorter wrinkly blunt-nosed pepper. There's quite a following in regards to this pepper which is a thin-walled frying pepper. I've tried the pepper raw and the flavor and texture was just, eh. But sautéing it with onions and it becomes something else entirely. Flavorful and incredibly sweet, my husband and I ate the Melrose peppers and onions on top of rice, and that was all it needed. So good. And a bonus for this variety is that the plants are productive.

I've been carefully saving seeds from our peppers, which have been disease free this season and tend to be in general. There have been very few pollinators around this year, but it's probably possible for peppers to accidently get pollinated by wind and such. Since I didn't do anything to isolate them, there's no guarantee they'll be true to type since I grew gobs of varieties.

Padron peppers tend to just be fiery hot in our climate, and Shishito peppers can be the same if left on the plant too long. The few tiny young Shishito peppers that have been edible after frying up with sea salt in a little olive oil, were quite wonderful.

We're still getting the occasional zucchini from our plants of both the Butta (F1) yellow zucchini and Striato d'Italia zucchini. Other than that, peppers, herbs, sweet potatoes, kale, and cutting celery are the only things left from the summer garden. I'll be sharing pictures on my gardening transitioning into fall in the next couple of days.

Please join us for Harvest Monday hosted by Dave at Happy Acres, a place where the strong at heart and overzealous come to share the fruits from their gardening labors.

13 comments:

Eight Gate Farm NH said...

Lovely peppers, Phuong. Peppers and onions on rice sounds really simple, but delicious. It's interesting that you get hot shishitos. I've never had a hot one, but maybe it's the difference in climate or the variety I grow (Mellow Star).

Dave @ HappyAcres said...

My shishitos get hot sometimes too, and I stopped growing Padrons because it seemed like they were always fiery hot. We're finally getting some ripe sweet peppers here too. I grew Feher Ozon a couple of years ago and I dried it for paprika. I didn't much like the flavor of it fresh. I do think a lot of sweet peppers are better cooked than raw, like Jimmy Nardello for instance. I'll have to check out Melrose. It's amazing your zucchini are still producing. Mine were toast a month ago.

joy said...

I haven't heard of any of these peppers so something to look out for. The Padrons here don't get too hot and are delicious but i didn't grow any this year and now I am wondering whey. Ah well, next year.

Sue Garrett said...

Most of the things that you mention are things that we don’t grow.

Phuong said...

Hi Will,
Maybe it's both the climate as well as the variety in regards to the too hot Shishito peppers. I'm growing an unnamed variety from Kitazawa seeds, so I'll check out Mellow Star. The peppers have been setting fruit like crazy since the weather has cooled a bit, hopefully they'll still have time to ripen nicely.

Phuong said...

Hi Dave,
Pepper season is such a wonderful time of year, especially since it signals the coming of cooler weather. Your late summer plantings are looking incredible, mine are just starting to germinate. I hope we get a nice long fall this year.

Phuong said...

Hi Joy,
It's wonderful when you find a variety that is delicious and does wonderfully in your climate. Whenever I find something like that I always think to myself, "I'll never be without you again."

Phuong said...

Hi Sue,
Peppers usually grow well outdoors for us, so I end up trying lots of different varieties. I'll mainly grow sweet peppers again next year. Although a few of my friends stuff jalapenos with cream cheese and then wrap then in bacon before baking, so I might change my mind if I end up liking that dish.

Kathy said...

With the very hot summer here the padrons are more fiery than usual especially once they are red, and we are using them up fried in strips alongside mushroom and courgettes as they are not very fleshy. Apart fromm jalapenos, the others are all new to me... they look really good

Phuong said...

Hi Kathy,
I picked a few tiny Padrons to see if they'll be milder than they're larger counterparts. One of these days we'll have a cooler summer, so I'll keep seed saving and trying to growing a couple plants. The longer red peppers in the top photo actually Corno di Toro Rosso and they can be nicely prolific for me.

Phuong said...

Hi Dave,
It was such a hot summer, I'm not surprised your zucchini plants burned up. Our garden is actually on the north side of the house with big oak trees shading one side, so they usually don't die from the heat, it's usually bugs that does them in.

Shaheen said...

Your peppers are absolutely amazing and I can only imagine how good they taste. I have never been able to grow them well and of course, living in the UK - we would have to grow them in the greenhouse.

Phuong said...

Hi Shaheen,
Some of them are incredibly sweet, especially when cooked. It's almost too hot for peppers here, they set only a few fruit in July and August because the heat sterilizes the pollen. Did you end up planting greens or herbs to grow during the fall? We get a nice long fall with the first frost not coming to the last week of November, so almost three months of cooler weather.