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Follow-Up Postings:
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| Nice looking peppers. I had a bunch of green ones in various stages that had to be picked or lost. Most of them are chopped and in the drier now. Still good to cook with. |
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- Posted by sandysgardens 4MN (My Page) on Tue, Oct 9, 12 at 7:13
| Agreed - getting to cold at night and I've called it quits too. Too much work moving and covering 30 plus plants. Spent weekend harvesting all peppers at the lake and home. Can't complain, it was an excellent pepper year, this year. Great Charleston plant! |
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| Don- Try throwing them in a paper bag with an apple, you'll be amazed how quickly they start to ripen. |
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| I like the apple-ripening idea, thanks. I threw all the ones with a bit of orange or red color in them, along with an apple, into a closed paper bag, and set up a second bag with another apple and all of the peppers that were fully yellow and had no green in them. Now I wait. |
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| I should add, that was for the Charleston Hot. For the Firecracker pepper I am just picking all of the peppers that are likely to have heat in them, then freezing them for future use. |
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| Don- It's working great for me on most of my peppers. There is one kind that is slower then the others but it is still working. I've got 7 potted palnts in my living room because od the recent nights in the 30s but next week looks like all 60s and mid 40s at night so I can take them back out for maybe a week or two. |
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- Posted by greenman28 NorCal 7b/8a (My Page) on Wed, Oct 10, 12 at 16:44
| Peppers don't respond to ethylene ripening the way other fruits do, so there's really no point in putting them in a bag with an apple/banana. Either the "signal" has gone out to begin ripening, or the peppers won't ripen. Josh |
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| I have to disagree, i've been doing it over two weeks now.Ive had compltely green peppers start to change overnight after putting them in a paper bag with an apple. I can't believe they just happened to turn that moment when ones that I have left on the plant did zip the same night. |
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- Posted by greenman28 NorCal 7b/8a (My Page) on Wed, Oct 10, 12 at 18:00
| Believe it. Even a completely green pepper can have been "signaled" to begin ripening. I've picked many green pods and had them begin ripening overnight due to the fact that they had already begun ripening, despite the fact that my eye couldn't tell it. For those with minds curious on the subject, here's a link:
Josh
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- Posted by highalttransplant z 5 Western CO (My Page) on Wed, Oct 10, 12 at 18:47
| We had our first frost over the weekend and I picked everything, green or not. They are all in bowls or other open containers, and sitting on the counters, etc. around the house. Lots of them are showing color now, that weren't a week ago. My experience has been that most of them will eventually turn colors. The ones that weren't mature enough when picked will shrivel up while still green, but there usually isn't very many of those, and they are typically pods that weren't full sized yet. Bonnie |
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| Well I don't know if it's the apple or the paper bag or the warmth of being indoors, or maybe all three, but in just 24 hours since picking there has been a noticeable color change in the Charleston peppers in the paper bag with an apple in it (placed in our kitchen). They've still got a long way to go to become fully red-ripe, but I'm impressed that I can see a definite change in just 24 hours since I picked them. |
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- Posted by greenman28 NorCal 7b/8a (My Page) on Thu, Oct 11, 12 at 9:42
| Don, they would have begun changing without the bag or the apple, I assure you. Josh |
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| Re: Josh's link, here is a definition of "climacteric" which has a good capsule description of the ripening process. |
Here is a link that might be useful: Climacteric (botany)
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"[When exposed to external ethylene] genes lower down the ethylene signal chain showed heightened levels of activity. "The genes for breaking down the plant cell wall or the carotenoid biosynthesis during the plant's normal process of ripening were produced in greater quantities in the tomatoes and peppers alike," explains Fernie." - Science News, "Ethylene of No Effect: Why Peppers Do Not Mature After Picking" Hmm. In other words, although the color may change (carotenoid biosynthesis), it is not true ripening and in fact might encourage decay. Conclusion: Ethylene is not useful for our purposes, but might be useful for commercial purposes where colored fruit is more salable. Dennis |
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| As long as someting is working, we'll just have to agree to disagree |
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- Posted by greenman28 NorCal 7b/8a (My Page) on Thu, Oct 11, 12 at 20:38
| Or you could simply leave them out of the bag and see that it works just as well. To each their own. Gardening is full of wive's tales and horticultural myths. My goal is to help clear up misconceptions that could potentially interfere with future learning. As it stands, your disagreement is not with me but with the Max Planck Institute, Josh |
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| Interesting discussion and I'd test it myself, but it's too late for me to set up a valid test this year. After sitting in a bag with an apple for 2 days, even if I took some out of the bag and they ripened at the same rate as those in the bag, one could reasonably claim that the ethylene in the bag was what started the ripening cascade in the first place. I'm staying on the fence over this one for now. I did read the Max Planck article listed above, and it says: "It looks like the ethylene has absolutely no influence on the gene expression or the metabolism of habenero chilli peppers," says group leader Alisdair Fernie However, the Planck group looked at habanero chiles only, which are C. chinense, whereas Charleston Hot are C. annum. So while their work seems pretty definitive for habaneros, that doesn't necessarily mean it applies to all chiles. Maybe it does, but I think there's still some room for doubt about whether it is valid beyond C. chinense chiles. Anyway, 2 days since picking and the peppers continue to ripen, though so far none have gone beyond orange or yellow-orange, whereas the ones that ripened on the plant turned deep red. In the second bag of all-yellow peppers (ie none that showed any trace of orange when picked), at least 3 have started to turn orange. The same Planck article states that "Other fruits, like peppers, grapes and strawberries, generally do not mature after picking; they need to be harvested when ripe and consumed as soon as possible." That would suggest that I can't expect much more ripening of my peppers. I can see a color change, but I would certainly not call them ripe yet, so it will be interesting to see how far along they get. If they aren't going to go red-ripe, I'll have to be vigilant to shut it down before they start to go bad. |
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- Posted by greenman28 NorCal 7b/8a (My Page) on Fri, Oct 12, 12 at 0:39
| Don, I've found that those green but starting to turn pods will often half-ripen before they shrivel or dry out. Some will ripen to red fully, but they'll typically be wrinkled by then... which makes them fairly unappetizing to consider eating without some additional processing. So yeah, be vigilant ;-) As for the chinense testing, I've heard that from others. Guess we could ask the Planck institute
Josh |
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| If you hear anything from them, be sure to post it (as I'm sure you will). Definitely interesting! |
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| I think y'all are missing the point. The test was run because of the observation that Peppers Do Not Mature After Picking. That fact has already been established. The tests were to find out what happens *when* the standard post-pick process fails, not *whether* it fails. |
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| We use color change to indicate ripeness. But if you look at the link for "climacteric" above you will see that there is much more to the state of ripeness. The main thing for our purposes would be a change in flavor. Still, those *look* good enough to eat. That by itself might make gassing worthwhile. |
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| For the ones that ripened outdoors on the plant I was impressed by the flavor -- kind of like a red bell, but surprisingly much sweeter, and with heat of course. When I shut down the indoor "ripening" I'll have a taste and see how they compare. |
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