Big Bomb Hot Pepper - New For 2024!
Capsicum annuum 'Big Bomb'
Height: 24 inches
Spacing: 24 inches
Sunlight:
Hardiness Zone: (annual)
Group/Class: Hot Cherry
Description:
A medium hot variety that produces bright red hot peppers, surrounded by green foliage; great for containers or gardens, these peppers have thicker walls allowing them to be stuffed without the worry of breaking; perfect for pickling and raw eating
Edible Qualities
Big Bomb Hot Pepper is an annual vegetable plant that is commonly grown for its edible qualities, although it does have ornamental merits as well. It produces small red round peppers (which are technically 'berries') with red flesh which are typically harvested when mature. The peppers have a spicy taste and a crisp texture.
The peppers are most often used in the following ways:
Planting & Growing
Big Bomb Hot Pepper will grow to be about 24 inches tall at maturity, with a spread of 20 inches. When planted in rows, individual plants should be spaced approximately 24 inches apart. This vegetable plant is an annual, which means that it will grow for one season in your garden and then die after producing a crop.
This plant is quite ornamental as well as edible, and is as much at home in a landscape or flower garden as it is in a designated vegetable garden. It should only be grown in full sunlight. It does best in average to evenly moist conditions, but will not tolerate standing water. It is not particular as to soil type or pH. It is somewhat tolerant of urban pollution. This is a selected variety of a species not originally from North America.
Big Bomb Hot Pepper is a good choice for the vegetable garden, but it is also well-suited for use in outdoor pots and containers. With its upright habit of growth, it is best suited for use as a 'thriller' in the 'spiller-thriller-filler' container combination; plant it near the center of the pot, surrounded by smaller plants and those that spill over the edges. It is even sizeable enough that it can be grown alone in a suitable container. Note that when growing plants in outdoor containers and baskets, they may require more frequent waterings than they would in the yard or garden.