Fish Pepper Heirloom Hot Pepper Seeds
Fish Pepper Seeds
Add color, flavor, and history to your garden with Fish Pepper Seeds. This striking heirloom pepper variety produces beautiful variegated foliage and peppers that ripen through cream, green, orange, brown, and red shades. Loved for both ornamental beauty and culinary heat, Fish Peppers are a must-grow for gardeners who enjoy unique plants with a story to tell.
History
Fish Pepper is a historic African American heirloom pepper dating back to the 1800s in the Mid-Atlantic region of the United States. It was especially popular around the Chesapeake Bay area, where it was used to season seafood dishes, crab boils, chowders, and sauces. Nearly lost to history, the variety was preserved and reintroduced through seed savers and heirloom growers.
Plant Profile
- Days to Maturity: 75–85 days from transplant
- Fruit Size: 2–4 inches long, tapered pods
- Plant Size: 24–36 inches tall, compact and bushy
- Color Stages: Cream striped, green, orange, brown, then red
- Scoville Heat Units: 5,000–30,000 SHU (medium heat)
Flavor Profile
Fish Peppers offer a bright, fruity pepper flavor with medium heat. Their heat level can vary from mild warmth to a stronger kick depending on ripeness and growing conditions. Excellent for sauces, hot pepper flakes, pickling, and seafood dishes.
Growth Type & Harvest Yields
- Compact bushy plants ideal for garden beds or containers
- Heavy producer through summer and early fall
- Continuous harvest encourages more fruit set
- Great ornamental edible variety thanks to variegated leaves and colorful fruit
Disease Resistance
Fish Pepper is valued for vigor and adaptability. While not specifically bred for modern resistance packages, healthy plants often perform well when given:
- Good airflow
- Consistent watering
- Mulching
- Crop rotation
- Well-drained soil
Growing Tips & Planting Dimensions
- Start indoors 8–10 weeks before last frost
- Transplant outdoors after soil warms and frost danger passes
- Plant in full sun (6+ hours daily)
- Space plants 18–24 inches apart
- Space rows 24–36 inches apart
- Keep evenly watered for best fruit quality
- Feed with balanced fertilizer once established
When to Start Indoors
Use your local frost dates for best timing. Check planting schedules by ZIP code using the USDA Plant Hardiness Zone Map: planthardiness.ars.usda.gov
General guide:
- Zones 3–5: Start indoors 8–10 weeks before last frost
- Zones 6–7: Start indoors 8 weeks before last frost
- Zones 8–10: Start indoors 6–8 weeks before planting out
Good Companion Plants & Mutual Benefits
- Basil – May help repel pests and improves garden diversity
- Onions – Help deter aphids and some insects
- Marigolds – Attract pollinators and discourage pests
- Carrots – Use space efficiently beneath pepper canopy
- Parsley – Supports beneficial insects
How to Enjoy
- Make homemade hot sauce
- Add to seafood boils and crab dishes
- Slice into stir fry or chili
- Dry for pepper flakes
- Pickle whole peppers
- Use as an edible ornamental in containers
Why Gardeners Love Fish Peppers
- Rare heirloom with rich American history
- Stunning variegated foliage
- Multi-colored fruits all season long
- Productive compact plants
- Excellent blend of beauty and heat
- Great conversation starter in the garden
Harvest Tips
- Harvest young cream or green peppers for milder heat
- Pick orange or red peppers for fuller flavor and stronger spice
- Use scissors or pruners to avoid branch damage
- Frequent harvesting increases production
Order Today
Grow a pepper that combines history, beauty, and bold flavor. Fish Pepper Seeds are perfect for gardeners who want something different, productive, and delicious. Add this heirloom favorite to your garden today.