Berries are the fleshy fruit of a flowering plant that contain multiple seeds per fruit, and who's fleshy part is formed from a single ova. Peppers, as well as many other 'vegetables', such as tomato, cucumber and squash fall into this category, as do bananas and citrus fruit.
Surprisingly, Strawberries, Raspberries and Blackberries are not technically berries. The flesh of Strawberries is not formed from the ova, whereas, Raspberries and Blackberries have multiple ova within a single flower, forming the 'bumpy' appearance of what is referred to as their 'berry'.
Some of the peppers that may be included in a chili recipe are chili, cayenne, and jalapeno peppers. Bell peppers are often pretty popular in chili recipes as well.
The scientific name is Capsicum annum it is in the same species as Bell peppers.
Hamsters can eat Bell Peppers, but not chili peppers, mine like lettuce too.
Chili peppers are in the botanical family Solanaceae. As are all other peppers, like bell peppers, sweet peppers, and ghost peppers. And deadly nightshade, potatoes, tomatoes, and tobacco, for that matter. It's a big family.
i think no.................
There are many different types of chili peppers. Some types include cherry pepper, pimento chili pepper, cubanelle chili pepper, banana pepper, lemon drop chili pepper, charleston hot chili pepper and sweet bell pepper just to name a few.
Edible peppers such as sweet and chili peppers are mainly cultivars of Capsicum annuum.Black Pepper comes from the peppercorns (fruits) of the unrelated flowering vine Piper nigrum.
Not generally, no. Red pepper flakes tend to be made out of chili peppers, which contain capsaicin, giving them a spicy sensation. Red bell pepper flakes do not contain capsaicin and don't have the spice of the red pepper flakes.
No they are the same thing. Just try one of each you will see they are exactly the same in flavor and texture. Mangos are great in spaghetti sauce, chilli, try stuffing some mangos' with ground beef and rice and a tomato sauce.
All chili peppers, from bland sweet bell peppers to Guatemalan insanity peppers that will melt your tongue at twelve paces, are in the genus Capsicum. For that matter, there are only five domesticated species; bell peppers, jalapenos, serranos, Anaheim, and poblanos are all different cultivars (if you think "like dog breeds, but with plants" you won't be far off) of Capsicum annuum, and the small Thai peppers and Tabasco peppers are both Capsicum frutescens. The hottest peppers (habaneros, datils) are usually Capsicum chinense.If you want an exact species name, you need to be more specific than "green chili"; most chili peppers are green when not fully ripe.
Red Hot Chili Peppers was created in 1983.
Red Hot Chili Peppers