Indian Peppers page 2
Indian Chilli peppers sourced from seed breeders in India
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Exotic Red C.annumm Exotica red harvested in north eastern states of India, a hot red chilli. Also known as Chinese hot and is used in Chinese restaurants in India. £0.60 Seed to raise 10 chilli seedlings £3.50 1 gram pkt - Seed to raise 100+ chilli seedlings
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Indian Chilli Mix C.annumm A mixture of 5 varieties of hot Indian chillies in one packet. Ideal for Asian dishes, curry paste, drying.
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Delhi Hot C.annumm Delhi Hot thin walled Indian chilli pepper hybrid, matures from green to dark red. Ideal for use fresh, dried or pickled. Maturity 75-85 days.
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Fire
cracker - Indian Pepper 50H Hot Indian Pepper Hybrid suitable for dry red and green peppers, heavy fruiting variety 9-10cm fruit length
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Open pollinated Indian Chilli Pepper varieties
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Bhavnagari Long Indian chilli pepper Bhavnagari Long, fruits are long, tapered and vary in size, they mature from green to red. A very hot red chili pepper.
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Gambia Harvested in India, chilli pepper Gambia, long thin pointed fruits ripen from green to red, very hot Indian red chilli pepper used in local dishes.
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Limo Indian chilli pepper Limo, pale green peppers ripen through pale orange to red. Capsicum annumm its origin is in the Kerala state in India. Hot chilli pepper.
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Cobra
- Indian Pepper G4 C.annuum Olive green coloured fruits ripen to dark red, also used for green chilli.
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Dagger Pod - Indian Pepper X-235 Hot slightly curved fruits, approx 10-12cm long, thin and tapered to a point. Fruits green maturing through orange to red.
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Index | A | B | C | D - G | Habanero | H | I - M | N - O | P - R | Scotch Bonnet | Chilli S - To | Tr - Z | Indian | Collections | Ornamentals | Worlds Hottest Chillies | NEW
The cultural
information should be used as a guide only, I have found a number of different
sowing techniques for the same seed from different sources there does not seem
to be a standard. With this in mind you should use this website as a guide only,
you probably already have a tried and tested way of sowing different seeds. As a
rule of thumb the larger the seed size the more cover it requires, and fine seed
like Lobelia Begonia etc requires no cover.
Disclaimer
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