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Bell pepper Corno di Toro Rosso seeds
Bell pepper Corno di Toro Rosso seeds
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Dispatch by letter from €3.90.
Delivery charge from €5.90 Oversize package delivery charge from €6.90.
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This plant carries a 6 months recovery warranty
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We guarantee the quality of our plants for a full growing cycle, and will replace at our expense any plant that fails to recover under normal climatic and planting conditions.
Seed-only orders are dispatched by sealed envelope. The delivery charge for seed-only orders is €3.90.
The 'Corno di Toro Rosso' Pepper is an Italian variety that offers curious elongated and incurved, red fruits, about 20 cm long and renowned for their sweet flavour and thick, delicious flesh. This pepper owes its name "Red Bull Horn" to the shape of its fruits that resembles a bull's horn. This sweet and sugary pepper is suitable for many culinary uses. You can enjoy it raw, incorporate it into salads, grill it, stuff it, or use it in various cooked dishes. It is an early variety, its fruit is among the first to ripen and preserves very well pickled in vinegar. Sow from February to May for a harvest from July to November.
We usually distinguish a difference between peppers and chillies. The pepper is a term for a chilli without or almost without capsaicin, the substance that produces the spicy, even burning effect.
The Pepper is a fruit vegetable which, like its very close relative the Chilli, belongs to the Solanaceae family. It is a perennial plant in tropical climates that is cultivated as an annual in our latitudes unless it has been potted so that it can be stored in warmth during the off-season. It produces small, white or purple flowers, with anthers or seeds of different colours depending on the species.
In the kitchen, the pepper is consumed raw in salads, quickly grilled, or cooked as a confit, in ratatouille or stuffed. It is one of those "sun fruits" much appreciated in summer.
In the garden or on the balcony for the most compact varieties, it is a vegetable plant that appreciates sun, heat, and regular watering. In cold climates, it benefits from being grown under cover. It is grown in rich soil, previously amended with 3 kg of compost per m2.
Harvest: the harvest takes place when the fruit has the colour it is supposed to have when ripe. Pick the fruits with a small knife or by hand as needed, taking care to leave one to two cm of the peduncle. Also, note that the pepper continues to ripen after being detached from the plant.
Storage: peppers can be stored for several days in the vegetable drawer of the refrigerator. Depending on the quantity of your production, you will most likely want to keep them a little longer. There are several methods: Firstly, drying can be done in several ways: either in the sun by cutting the peppers in half lengthwise. Air-drying indoors is only possible if the conditions are dry enough, otherwise the fruits will become soft. It can be done with whole fruits in the oven on the rack at low temperature (about 50°C) for several hours.
You can also opt for the preservation of fresh peppers. You can store them marinated in oil with herbs, in vinegar pickles style, or reduce them to puree. For these last methods, there are plenty of recipes. You can also freeze your peppers. In all cases, wash and dry them carefully.
The gardener's tip: To combat red spider mites, plant radishes nearby.
Harvest
Plant habit
Foliage
Botanical data
Peppers are easy to grow. Sun and heat play a decisive role in their success. They are happy with any soil even though they prefer rich, loose, and well-drained soil. You can enrich it with a little sand if the substrate is too compact.
Sowing under glass: from mid-February to May, sow indoors or in heated greenhouses in trays at around 20°C. Bury the seeds under 5 to 7 mm of seed compost as they need darkness to germinate. Do not use compost at this stage, as you might burn the future roots. The growth of Pepper plants is fast: the seeds germinate between 3 days after sowing and a week. This is an average. Do not discard a tray if the seeds have not germinated during this time, thinking they are irrecoverable. Some varieties are slow and take their time. When the plants have reached 5 to 6 true leaves, repot them in pots that will have a little more space for their roots and start acclimatising them outside on sunny days.
Transplanting in open ground: once the risk of frost is no longer a concern, usually around mid-May, transplant your plants into open ground. Choose the sunniest and warmest spots in the garden. At the foot of a wall facing due South is an ideal position. Loosen the soil and then dig a hole at least 3 to 4 times the volume of the root system of your plant. Amend the bottom with a little well-decomposed compost. Plant your pepper, which can be buried up to the first leaves, then backfill. Tamp, form a basin around the plant, then water generously. Be careful not to water the leaves to protect your plants from fungal diseases. If you wish to plant several plants, space them 60 cm apart in all directions.
Maintenance: laying mulch at the base of your plants helps maintain some moisture and avoids having to weed. Pepper plants do not need a lot of watering: their root system has a taproot that searches deeply for available resources. Water generously only in case of prolonged drought. If you have opted for container gardening, you can keep your Pepper plants for several years by storing them in a warm and well-lit place during the off-season. In pots, the plant cannot develop as efficient a taproot as in open ground. It is then necessary to water it regularly but moderately.
Seedlings
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Intended location
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Hardiness is the lowest winter temperature a plant can endure without suffering serious damage or even dying. However, hardiness is affected by location (a sheltered area, such as a patio), protection (winter cover) and soil type (hardiness is improved by well-drained soil).
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The flowering period indicated on our website applies to countries and regions located in USDA zone 8 (France, the United Kingdom, Ireland, the Netherlands, etc.)
It will vary according to where you live:
In temperate climates, pruning of spring-flowering shrubs (forsythia, spireas, etc.) should be done just after flowering.
Pruning of summer-flowering shrubs (Indian Lilac, Perovskia, etc.) can be done in winter or spring.
In cold regions as well as with frost-sensitive plants, avoid pruning too early when severe frosts may still occur.
The planting period indicated on our website applies to countries and regions located in USDA zone 8 (France, United Kingdom, Ireland, Netherlands).
It will vary according to where you live:
The harvesting period indicated on our website applies to countries and regions in USDA zone 8 (France, England, Ireland, the Netherlands).
In colder areas (Scandinavia, Poland, Austria...) fruit and vegetable harvests are likely to be delayed by 3-4 weeks.
In warmer areas (Italy, Spain, Greece, etc.), harvesting will probably take place earlier, depending on weather conditions.
The sowing periods indicated on our website apply to countries and regions within USDA Zone 8 (France, UK, Ireland, Netherlands).
In colder areas (Scandinavia, Poland, Austria...), delay any outdoor sowing by 3-4 weeks, or sow under glass.
In warmer climes (Italy, Spain, Greece, etc.), bring outdoor sowing forward by a few weeks.