The seeds from a pepper without mold will be better for use in recipes. Seeds used for planting should also be mold-free, ensuring a healthy plant.
Yes, you can plant seeds from dried peppers and they can still grow into new plants. Drying the peppers does not harm the seeds' ability to germinate and grow.
No, it is still considered a pumpkin.
Yes, Peppers Bedroom City Superstore is still in business.
A sunflower seed is the fruit of the sunflower. The seed is referred to as a achene when it is inside of its shell or pericarp.
They are in the same place as the seeds in a jalapeno or any other pepper, inside along the membranes (it is not the seeds that are hot, it is the membrane they are touching that holds the oils and heat). Ornamental peppers are usually really too hot for most people and that is why people don't eat them much, but they are still the same fruit of a pepper plant (capsicum) with the same structure, and can be used the same as any chile if you can handle the heat (eat a banana if you can't).
Yes, the Red Hot Chili Peppers are all still alive, and still performing.
yes, i would say it is. the best way to plant green peppers is to plant them in a pot then move them to a garden in may. seeing as it's already June... but still, it wouldn't hurt to try, just don't expect a lot of peppers, if any.
Muesli is a mixture because it is composed of different ingredients such as rolled oats, nuts, dried fruits, and seeds that are physically combined but can still be separated.
No. It just becomes a lemon with orange juice inside it. It's still a lemon and its seeds will still produce nothing but lemon trees.
Yes, if the seed was dried before being frozen it should grow just fine. As I understand it, trying to grow from a seed actually frozen in the pepper while the pepper was still fresh won't work. Storing seeds in the crisper drawer in your fridge is the best place to store seeds.
The Red Hot Chili Peppers didn't retire. They are still on their world tour.
A good substitute for habanero peppers in a recipe is to use jalapeo peppers, which are milder in heat but still provide a similar flavor profile.