Redirected from Bell pepper
Peppers | ||||||||||||||||
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Scientific classification | ||||||||||||||||
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Species | ||||||||||||||||
C. annuum (Bell pepper, paprika, pimento)
C. frutescens (chili pepper, cayenne pepper) C. chinense (habanero) C. pendulum C. pubescens C. minimum C. baccatum C. abbreviatum C. anomalum = Turbocapsicum anomalum C. breviflorum C. buforum C. brasilianum C. campylopodium C. cardenasii C. chacoense C. ciliatum C. chlorocladium C. coccineum C. cordiforme = C. annuum C. cornutum C. dimorphum C. dusenii C. exile C. eximium C. fasciculatum C. fastigiatum = C. frutescens C. flexuosum C. galapagoensis C. geminifolum C. hookerianum C. lanceolatum C. leptopodum C. luteum C. microcarpum C. minutiflorum C. mirabile C. parvifolium C. praetermissum C. schottianum C. scolnikianum C. stramonifolium = Witheringia stramonifolia C. tetragonum C. tovarii C. villosum C. violaceum |
Larger miniature bell peppers image
The fruit is boxlike, conical, or spherical and filled with air. It has 2 to 4 vertical ribs on the inside, which may carry seeds; but the bulk of the seeds are on a dome at the stem end. Capsicums vary in horticulturally ripe colour and may be green, yellow, orange, bright red, lavender, brownish purple, or other colors depending on variety and on what stage of botanical ripeness is considered best for use.
Capsicums and peppers are edible in a raw form although the hotter varieties are generally cooked to remove some of the capsaicin and tone down their heat. Those used in cooking are generally varieties of the C. annuum and C. frutescens species, though a few others are used as well. They are suitable for stuffing with either a raw filling (such as cheese) or one that requires cooking (such as meat and rice). They are also used chopped and raw in salads or cooked in stir-fries or other mixed dishes, sliced vertically and fried, chopped and incorporated into salsas or other sauces, and for many others uses. They can be preserved by drying and either used whole as a flavoring or processed into flakes or powders. They can be pickled and added to sandwiches or salads. Extracts can be incorporated into hot sauces.
Many varieties of the same species can be used in many different ways; for example, C. annuum includes the "bell pepper" variety, which is sold in both its immature green state and its ripe red state, where it is called "pimento". This same species has other varieties as well, such as the Anaheim chiles often used for stuffing, the dried Ancho chile used to make chilli powder[?], the mild-to-hot Jalapeño, and the smoked Jalapeño, known as a Chipotle.
Most of the capsaicin in a pepper is found in the interior ribs that divide the chambers of the fruit, and to which the seeds are attached. The amount varies wildly with variety, and is measured in Scoville units, ranging from the mild bell pepper to the scorching Habanero.
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