Beaver Dam Organic Hot Pepper

Nature & Nurture Seeds

Capsicum annuum

$4.99

Pkt (≈20 seeds)
VALUE SIZE: (≈100 seeds)
Certified Organic

Beaver Dam offers the complex, sugary flavor and eating qualities of a sweet-bell pepper, but it pairs these qualities with the spice of a medium hot pepper (rated 3 on the heat scale). Its thick, juicy, crisp walls make this a pepper with substance! Large fruit size, thick flesh, and few seeds make for easy processing.

This pepper was brought to the Great Lakes Region (Beaver Dam, Wisconsin) in 1912 by a Hungarian family. Listed in the Slow Food Ark of Taste, this gorgeous pepper is quite unique.

Everyone on the farm loves Mike's "Beaver Fever" pepper sauce (recipe here). This delectable sauce embodies the sweet, complex, aromatic flavors of Beaver Dam peppers plus a mild heat. Even farmer Erica who can't handle much heat loves Beaver Fever Sauce. Great topping for almost any dish. Enjoy it spread on toast, atop rice, stir fries, tacos, pizza -  we can't get enough of it! Freeze the sauce to enjoy it all winter long.

Raw peppers can be eaten like sweet-bell peppers by heat-lovers. Cooking mellows out the heat but preserves the robust flavor. Great grilled or stir fried. Also makes kickin' kimchi, sriracha, and chile rellenos. Can be dried for a full-bodied paprika with a punch. Whole peppers store for an extended period of time at room temperature.

90 days to maturity.

All peppers are warm-weather loving plants. These pepper plants have the capacity to grow big & produce lots of peppers if given proper care.  Sow seeds indoors 3/15-4/1 into good seed starting mix (we recommend Vermont Compost’s Fort Light). Ideal temperature for germination is 80-90° (use heating mat). Days to germination: 6-28. Once leaves appear, grow plants at 72°. Be sure seedlings have adequate light (a windowsill will not do for peppers) and keep plants from becoming pot-bound because this will permanently stunt plants.  If seedlings are getting too big for their pot but the weather is still too cold outside, transplant them into bigger pots. Plant seedlings outside late May into fertile garden soil with lots of compost or decomposed manure. If your soil pH is greater than 7 (which is typical of clay soils in Southeast Michigan) add sulfur to acidify soil before planting. Space plants 1 ½ - 2ft apart. If plants begin to flower when plants are less than 1ft tall, hand remove early flowers for 2 weeks until plants are bigger. Stake plants.