We grow a wide variety of chilis at One Love Farm. Cayenne and Hot Portugual for chili powder. Red and green bell peppers for roasting and salads. Padron for frying and jalapeno for pickling. Peppers like well drained soil and hot summers. That's why they do so well in the southwest United States and Mexico. But, we do have long enough summers in Rhode Island to still get some good peppers. You just need to make sure they get water full sun and water during periods of low rainfall. With that, you'll get tons of fruit to enjoy from August until frost kills back the plants.
For chilis that you want to dry, you can pick the fruit and air dry them in a cool, dark place (like a basement). They will dry in a few weeks. Or, you can put them in the oven on a cookie sheet. The temp of the oven should be its lowest setting and the chilis will be dry in a few hours. At One Love Farm, we use a dehydrador to dry our chilis.
Sweet peppers can be preserved by freezing, but I find the texture rubbery when thawed. Generally, I will preserve and can the peppers in vinegar and store them in jars in the basement. But, truth be told, nothing beats a fresh pepper, picked in the warm summer sun.
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