Bird pepper can hardly be called a wildflower in the same way most others are, but its small white blooms and bright red fruit lend color to a wildflower planting. This species prefers sunny locations and well-drained soils. In frost-free areas, it forms a woody stem and can reach a mature height of 6 feet. The plants photographed above are in my nursery and still in pots as I decide what to do with them. The foliage is similar to other peppers - deep green in color and lanceolate in shape. Each leaf is about 1 inch long and 1/2 inch wide.
Flowering can occur throughout the year in frost-free locations. The white flowers are about 1/4 inch wide and dangle downwards. Pollinated blooms give rise to small green fruit that ripen to bright red. Each is tiny - never much more than 1/4 inch long, but extremely pungent. It is said to be at least 10 times the pungency of a typical jalapeno, for example.
The vast majority of bird species have no real sense of smell/taste and an eye for the red of ripe fruit. Because of this, fruit-eating birds like mockingbirds and catbirds relish the fruit of bird pepper, but it is avoided by mammals such as squirrels.
Bird pepper is something of a conversation piece and therefore is offered regularly by a number of native plant nurseries. In a landscape, it is a good bird plant and the tiny pungent peppers are a good addition to all kinds of dishes where its small size and flavor are an important attribute. Bird pepper reseeds well, but I find it best to save a few dried peppers to sow just in case my mature plants die over winter.
Question: having grown up in the Philippines, we used these frequently- and sparingly! in our cooking. Would the Spaniards have brought them, or would they possibly be native there? FYI.... the leaves are excellent in soups= adds a slightly peppery zing to the broth! I cook with the pepper leaves more than the peppers themselves!
ReplyDeleteI believe we have mostly the wild birds to thank for these wonderful wild and wildly hot little peppers. That's how we got two bushes started in our backyard this year -- perhaps not so ironically since we just started feeding the the birds in our backyard this year. VERY exciting and didn't spot them until they were already producing the tiny red berries, which I love to add to my homemade V8-style juice! For a whole blenderful (about 5 cups) I like to use about 2. More than that I can do if I want to add a BIG kick. Also just found out that this little pepper became the Texas State Pepper in 1997. I know they also grow as far west as Arizona. I had lived in a different part of Austin, Texas ten years ago where a big bush grew wild across the street from where I lived. Loved those things and never saw them anywhere for actually more like 12 years until they popped up in our yard this year. Yippee....!!! Thank you, birdies!
DeleteThe birds eat most of my peppers before I can get them to eat or seed. Then, when I was not looking, my bush died. I suggest planting a little one under or next to a mature one so you never have to go without peppers or happy birds
ReplyDeleteWhere can get seeds for this pepper? My great grandmother used to grow them.
ReplyDeleteYou may not find anyone that sells seed of this species, but it is sometimes offered as plants by native nurseries. Once you have a plant or two, you can collect seed from your own plants.
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