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Old October 14, 2015   #1
ScottinAtlanta
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Default How to use immature peppers at season end

Folks, I am shutting down operations and moving plants inside. There are hundreds of smaller and immature peppers on my scorpions, fatalis, congos, 7 pods, etc. They won't ripen now.

Is there a good way to use these immature peppers? Just grind them up for fermented sauce?
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Old October 16, 2015   #2
Minnesota Mato
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I filled a 5 gallon bucket full of peppers tonight because it is going to frost here. I like to take my immature peppers at the end of the season and pickle them. I mix them all together, add a few colored ones and can them. You never know exactly what the heat level will be but that is half the fun!
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Old October 18, 2015   #3
guruofgardens
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Sounds like a great use of the green peppers, Minnesota Mato. Do you have a favorite recipe that you use for them?

Do you pickle them whole?

The only ones we've pickled were sliced superhots.
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Old December 17, 2015   #4
shule1
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If it were me, I would prolong using them until either you absolutely have to or they're dry. They might sweeten up at least a bit if you do that. You could probably put them in brown paper bags to encourage faster drying, and a cold room to encourage them to keep longer.
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Old December 17, 2015   #5
FarmerShawn
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Default How to use immature peppers at season end

At the end of my season here I picked eight shallow tubs (about 18 X 24 X 6 inches deep) full of unripe peppers, hot and sweet, a multitude of varieties. We use very few green peppers, because the ripe ones have better flavor for most of the sauces and powders I make with them. I just left the tubs open and at room temperature, and went through them every other day or so to remove the ripe ones for processing, either dehydrating or fermenting. Of course, we ate a few. In about a month, I finally tossed all that remained, and that was less than half a tub. Almost all of the rest ripened nicely, and remained fairly crisp to the end. A very few rotted prematurely, but most of those showed signs of blossom end rot or fungal damage or sun scald. Still, at least seven of eight tubs of unripe picked peppers stored at room temperature seems like a pretty good yield.
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Old December 17, 2015   #6
peppero
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first, Scott, my seeds have arrived. second, my hot peepers that I moved inside are ripening and I do not see why you wont.

jon
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Old December 17, 2015   #7
peppero
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first, Scott, my seeds have arrived. second, my hot peepers that I moved inside are ripening and I do not see why yours wont.

jon
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