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Trusted Contributor
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Registered: ‎03-12-2010

@butterfly123 wrote:

@nanny24

 

Tip: How to Check for the Hotness of Jalapenos

 
How hot is that jalapeno? Here's a tip to help gauge the level of heat before you buy or pick the pepper.

Ever take home a jalapeño chile pepper from the grocery store and have it either be so lacking in heat it may just as well be a bell pepper, or so hot a speck will create a raging inferno in your mouth?

 

Here’s a quick tip for choosing jalapeños that can help you decide which ones to pick.

 

As they age, some peppers develop white lines and flecks, like stretch marks running in the direction of the length of the pepper. The stretch marks are also indicative of the amount of stress the pepper plant has endured.

 

A pepper plant that is stressed, having the soil get dry between infrequent waterings, appears to have an impact on the the hotness of the pepper.

 

The older the pepper, and the more stress the plant has been under, the more white lines you’ll see, and the hotter the pepper will be.

 

The smoother the pepper, the younger, less stressed, and milder it is.

 

Left on the plant (and even after picked) green jalapeños will eventually turn red. So red jalapeños are older than green jalapeños. The red ones can be pretty hot, especially if they have a lot of striations, but they are also sweeter than the green.

 

Jalapeno Hotness

If you are trying to avoid the hottest jalapeños (say for a stuffed jalapeno dish), pick the chiles without any striations. If you are looking for heat, find a red or green one with plenty of white stretch marks.

 

Note that this is just a guideline. There is still plenty of variation among individual peppers. Make sure to taste test a chili before using it in a recipe!

 

The best way to taste test?

Capsaicin, the chemical that gives chiles their heat, is concentrated around the seeds and in the ribs. The flesh of the chile that is closer to the seeds will be hotter than the flesh near the tip.

 

So the best way to taste a potentially hot chili is to cut off a small piece at the tip and have a nibble (you’ll have less chance of burning your tongue if the chili is really hot).

For cooking, if you want to lower the heat of the chiles, cut the peppers in half, scrape out and discard the seeds and inner ribs (use gloves and don’t touch your eyes). If you want more heat, just add back some seeds with the rest of the jalapeño.

 

@butterfly123You are exactly right.  We grow our own and the hotter jalpenno always have the white striation marks. As far as heat goes, the green ones with the white marks can be as hot as the red ones except the red ones are sweeter. I've also bought some and find it's a ****** shoot in so far as heat.  Our grocery store has pre-stuffed ones that I sometimes buy if I'm in a hurry, sometimes they are like green peppers, and other times they are hot as h***!!

Honored Contributor
Posts: 10,620
Registered: ‎09-22-2010

@butterfly123

 

Thanks for the info on jalapenos.  I learn something new everyday!

Honored Contributor
Posts: 12,901
Registered: ‎07-09-2010

@butterfly123

 

thanks for the info -

 

always thought the lines were just unattractive, bruised so I would avoid them anyway lol

 

use your magic powers and tell me how to avoid mealy apples.

Super Contributor
Posts: 498
Registered: ‎04-06-2010

Thank you butterfly, that info was helpful.

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Registered: ‎06-27-2013

@Yahooey wrote:

@butterfly123

 

thanks for the info -

 

always thought the lines were just unattractive, bruised so I would avoid them anyway lol

 

use your magic powers and tell me how to avoid mealy apples.

 

@Yahooey


I looked up the definition of mealy and I’m confused. What type of apples are you buying and is mealy a granular texture? Ai iz a leetle slow dinkin😊

Honored Contributor
Posts: 16,185
Registered: ‎03-11-2010

@butterfly123

 

DH grows them every summer. He cuts most of them to freeze for meals we make. He does eat plenty of them. 

Yes some are hotter then others. He leaves some on the plant just so they can get red. He does say those are sweeter. 

He makes jalapeno poppers with them too.

Honored Contributor
Posts: 10,168
Registered: ‎03-14-2010
There are lots of different kinds of peppers...more than just bell peppers or jalapeños...try poblano peppers....used as rellenos most of the time...they are milder but flavorful and you can stuff them with anything and guests will enjoy with no fear of too much heat.
Honored Contributor
Posts: 10,168
Registered: ‎03-14-2010
Years ago when I had a garden I planted radishes every year...they are early...one year they were so hot I finally dug up the plants and got rid of them! No idea why they were so hot they brought tears to your eyes! Radishes seem so innocent....😉