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How to Grow Peppers

How to Grow PeppersSweet peppers and hot peppers are most easily grown in the garden from transplants started indoors. Start seed indoors 7 to 10 weeks before the date you intend to set peppers into the garden. Don’t rush peppers into the garden. Transplant pepper seedling into the garden 2 to 3 weeks after the last frost in spring, after the soil temperature has warmed to at least 65°F (18°C). Peppers mature in 60 to 95 days depending on the variety.

How to Grow Peppers

Planting Peppers

Starting Pepper Seed Indoors:

More tips on growing peppers from seed: Pepper Seed Starting Tips.

How to Grow Peppers

Planting Peppers Outdoors:

Spacing Pepper Plants:

Container Growing Peppers:

Caring for Peppers

Watering and Feeding Peppers:

How to Grow Peppers

Maintaining Peppers:

Pepper Pests:

Pepper Diseases:

More to pepper pests and diseases: Pepper Growing Problems: Troubleshooting.

How to Grow Peppers

Harvesting and Storing Peppers

Harvesting Peppers:

More harvest tips: How to Harvest and Store Peppers.

Storing and Preserving Peppers:

How to Grow Peppers

Sweet Pepper Varieties to Grow

Sweet peppers vary in shape and color and include the slender banana pepper; the short, round cherry pepper; the small bright-red, heart-shaped pimiento; the multi-colored Italian frying pepper; and the blocky green to yellow to orange to red bell pepper. Sweet peppers can be eaten raw, cooked, or pickled. Not all sweet pepper varieties are mildly flavored; some can be spicy and hot.

Peppers to plant: Pepper Varieties: Best Bets and Easy-To-Grow.

How to Grow Peppers

Hot Pepper Varieties to Grow

Hot peppers–also called chili peppers–vary in shape and color and include the bell-shaped pepper, the heart-shaped pimiento, the short and long podded yellow wax, the conical-shaped jalapeño, and the cayenne. Peppers easily cross-pollinate there are thousands of different hot peppers.

Hot peppers are rated by their heat–called Scoville heat units (SHU). The greater the number of units on the Scoville scale the hotter the pepper. Here are several hot pepper varieties starting with the hottest (all of these will cause most people discomfort when eaten):

More on hot peppers: How to Choose a Chili Pepper.

About Peppers

Grow 80 vegetables: THE KITCHEN GARDEN GROWERS’ GUIDE


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