More on jalapeños
If you've been reading me regularly, you know that this is the first year I've grown jalapeño peppers. (This is the first year I've had a vegetable garden at all.) And I don't know if this is a weird season or what, but it sure seems like the weather is moving way too quickly for the garden inhabitants. All the bell peppers are still tiny, there are still dozens of unripened tomatoes, the cantaloupe fruits aren't near picking-sized yet, etc. Yet it's getting down to 45 degrees some nights. Is this normal? Is the growing season in Chicagoland just not quite long enough?
(A tangent: that, I realize, is the stupidest question in the world, especially coming from me. I've long supported the weather in Chicago I love the hot summers and cold winters but I still believe the summer needs to be about one month longer and the winter needs to be about one month shorter. That might be a perfect climate.)
So if you read yesterday about my stuffed jalapeño pepper lunch, you know that I've harvested only 5 jalapeño peppers from the garden. There are more out there, but it's hard for me to tell if they're ready. I'm looking for that really saturated green, and for the size, that I'm accustomed to seeing in the grocery store. And that is, for the most part, what I got yesterday.
But some of the peppers are getting striated. Here is a pic:

See the three that have lines on them? Do you think that means they're overly ripe? For the record, they all tasted great. I'm just wondering if I should take that as a sign that it's definitely time to pick 'em.
And I'm still wondering what I thought I would do with all those habanero peppers and chili peppers. In the beginning, I swore to use my entire yield, even if I had to freeze stuff, and I think it's time to pick and freeze some peppers.
(A tangent: that, I realize, is the stupidest question in the world, especially coming from me. I've long supported the weather in Chicago I love the hot summers and cold winters but I still believe the summer needs to be about one month longer and the winter needs to be about one month shorter. That might be a perfect climate.)
So if you read yesterday about my stuffed jalapeño pepper lunch, you know that I've harvested only 5 jalapeño peppers from the garden. There are more out there, but it's hard for me to tell if they're ready. I'm looking for that really saturated green, and for the size, that I'm accustomed to seeing in the grocery store. And that is, for the most part, what I got yesterday.
But some of the peppers are getting striated. Here is a pic:

See the three that have lines on them? Do you think that means they're overly ripe? For the record, they all tasted great. I'm just wondering if I should take that as a sign that it's definitely time to pick 'em.
And I'm still wondering what I thought I would do with all those habanero peppers and chili peppers. In the beginning, I swore to use my entire yield, even if I had to freeze stuff, and I think it's time to pick and freeze some peppers.
Labels: jalapenos, vegetable garden



2 Comments:
Yes, the lines mean they are over ripe! But good, as you say.
All the peppers you mentioned can be dried, too. Works well.
By
joeyTWOwheels, At
September 12, 2008 9:30 AM
joey2: Thanks! There's a narrow window between not-quite-ripe (light green) and over-ripe (stripey). But I'll find it. :) (Not that I'd notice the difference, probably!)
By
Jen S., At
September 12, 2008 9:32 AM
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