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Author Topic: The Habanada Heatless Habanero Pepper  (Read 2493 times)

Offline Irene

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The Habanada Heatless Habanero Pepper
« on: February 24, 2017, 03:38:49 pm »
I'm old, so my days of enjoying hot and spicy foods are over, but there's still hope. A scientist at Cornell University, who specializes in breeding organic plants, has created the habanada pepper, a heatless alternative to the habanero.

You get all the flowery essence with none of the Scovilles that are present in the true habanero pepper.

Quote
We are surrounded by brilliant innovations, some old and some new. Electricity, weaving, combustion, language: each one began as an unthinkable notion. Each had passionate people who believed it could be done who tried, failed and tried again. The dedication of countless visionaries surrounds us.

Agriculture itself is such an innovation, one that is constantly re-imagining itself through the needs and dreams of every generation. Each new variety of vegetable is the evidence of a constantly changing, constantly adapting, constantly innovating world.

Habanada is a brand new pepper, the first truly heatless habanero (hence the haba-nada) bursting with all the bright, tropical flavor of the fruit unmasked. Many attempts have been made over the years but none have achieved the fullness of flavor with absolutely zero heat. Their crisp, thin skin has an exotic, floral flavor like no pepper I have ever tasted. From cast-away seed to a signature show-stopper variety, Michael Mazourek has brought this pepper a long way in just thirteen generations.

Michael Mazourek is one of our heros, let me count the ways: father, Cornell professor and effortlessly hilarious, Michael is also one of the top organic plant breeders in the world. Michael is also unique for being one of the few plant breeders who is publicly developing varieties with culinary quality in addition to disease-resistance and productivity. You may be familiar with some of Mazourek’s varieties that have already changed the way we eat, like Honeynut Winter Squash (a super small, super sweet butternut) and Silver Slicer Cucumber (a sweet, crunchy white slicer with notable disease resistance). He is constantly playing with his food, using classical breeding (non-GMO) methods to dream more delicious, more productive & more disease resistant varieties into existence.

As a species, we’ve been saving seed for 10,000+ years; it is because of people like Mazourek that we have cultivated such extraordinary diversity in such little time. It all started when the University of New Mexico discovered an off-type plants in their Habanero lines that didn’t even register on the Scoville scale. (Habaneros often register 40 times hotter than Jalapenos on the Scoville scale of pepper pungency.) Mazourek, a plant breeder interested in peppers, was sent some of these seeds to study. Thus began the journey to Habanada.

Mazourek wondered, “what if there was a pepper I could share with my friends who didn’t like hot peppers so they could taste what I love without the heat?” This was Mazourek’s first foray into plant breeding and he was optimistic: a gene for heat, in a laboratory, is simple to identify. But in the field, he soon discovered that it wasn’t so simple; some peppers were delicious, some tasted strange, and still others tasted just plain bad. Few truly tasted like a bright, floral habanero. When he realized there was more to it than an assay in the lab, Mazourek shifted his approach and back-crossed his heatless lines to full-heat habaneros. “Though I didn’t know what exactly was going on, I learned as I went,” Mazourek recalled. “As I was changing this pepper, this pepper was changing me.” After tasting thousands of peppers in thirteen generations of rigorous selection, Mazourek has stabilized the dream of a full-flavored, heatless Habanero.

Habanada has quickly captured the imaginations of chefs, farmers and eaters all over the country and all over the world. “Habanada has such unique floral qualities,” remarked Nora Antene, the chef of Portland, Oregon’s renowned Le Pigeon restaurant. Antene was paired with Mazourek’s Habanada at the 2014 Culinary Breeding Network Variety Showcase, an event bringing together plant breeders and chefs to create innovative, delectable dishes highlighting the importance of variety development. “Habanada was simple to showcase: it seems complete on its own,” added Antene. For the event, Antene created a Habanada sherbet that electrified the event. Anticipating the coming summer and the subsequent pepper harvest, Antene is already dreaming of strawberry-Habanada shortcake and Habanada crème brulee as well as its above average contributions to classic pico de gallo.

Habanada is also being featured at Expo Milano 2015, a six-month celebration of concrete solutions to providing “healthy, safe and sufficient food for everyone, while respecting the Planet and its equilibrium.” From its innovative development to its unique flavor Habanada truly deserves this recognition.

This season you’ll find Habanadas on the menu of incredible restaurants from coast to coast and indeed all over the world. You can also grow your own, and here are a few tips to keep in mind. “Habanada will easily become a hedgerow with few fruits if they are grown with too much nitrogen,” Mazourek warns, “so go easy on the compost.” They love heat, full sun and even water. Each plant will produce about a pint per week once they start fruiting. Though Habanada has a have a wide window of delectable ripeness, we try to harvest when they are bright tangerine orange and two to three inches long, perfect for popping into your mouth. Indeed, the rich floral character is in the seeds as well as the flesh, so enjoy your Habanadas in their entirety!

This season you can find certified organic Habanada transplants through Fruition Seeds as three-inch pot transplants for gardeners as well as 72 plant trays for farmers. Plants are also available at Fruition Seeds’ farm store every Saturday in April, May and early June in addition to their 200+ varieties of organic, regionally adapted vegetable, herb and flower seeds as well as seed potatoes and transplants of other great varieties.

Source . . .
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Offline The Seeker

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Re: The Habanada Heatless Habanero Pepper
« Reply #1 on: February 24, 2017, 05:37:12 pm »
Look closely: See clearly: Think deeply; and Choose wisely...
Trolls are crunchy and good with ketchup...
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Offline Shasta56

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Re: The Habanada Heatless Habanero Pepper
« Reply #2 on: February 25, 2017, 07:57:58 pm »
That sounds like a pepper that I would enjoy.  My tolerance for the hot stuff tops out at banana peppers these days.

Shasta
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Offline Irene

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Re: The Habanada Heatless Habanero Pepper
« Reply #3 on: February 26, 2017, 09:42:42 am »
That sounds like a pepper that I would enjoy.  My tolerance for the hot stuff tops out at banana peppers these days.

Shasta

Yes, same here. I love pepperoncini, but I can't eat them after 1500. :)
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Offline The Seeker

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Re: The Habanada Heatless Habanero Pepper
« Reply #4 on: February 27, 2017, 05:12:18 am »
I love spicy foods and used to enjoy eating hot pepper, however, since my surgery in August I can't handle the spicy any more, and I do believe it is directly related to the gas used to keep me out;

However, I do enjoy the flavor of the tame jalapeno peppers and pepperonici


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Offline Shasta56

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Re: The Habanada Heatless Habanero Pepper
« Reply #5 on: February 27, 2017, 06:40:44 am »
I refused to let the anesthesiologist intubate me and give me gas for my second shoulder surgery.  He was not happy.  My husband was there for the discussion, so it wasn't like he could just pretend it didn't happen.  I do not tolerate the gas at all.  Anesthesiologists don't like it when patients advocate for themselves.

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Offline The Seeker

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Re: The Habanada Heatless Habanero Pepper
« Reply #6 on: February 27, 2017, 06:48:54 am »
I refused to let the anesthesiologist intubate me and give me gas for my second shoulder surgery.  He was not happy.  My husband was there for the discussion, so it wasn't like he could just pretend it didn't happen.  I do not tolerate the gas at all.  Anesthesiologists don't like it when patients advocate for themselves.

Shasta
I hear you  8) hopefully I won't have to go thru this again, for my digestive tract was changed drastically starting immediately after the surgery... I am happy to be getting the use of my arm again but I don't want to think about having to go thru this again :o

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Offline Irene

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Re: The Habanada Heatless Habanero Pepper
« Reply #7 on: February 27, 2017, 10:52:43 am »
My aversion to hot and spicy started in the late 90's. I had a bout of severe stomach flu and my digestion has never recovered.

If I want to eat something hot or spicy I have to eat it for lunch and then take nothing but fluids the rest of the day. I'm a tea drinker during the day, so no problem there.

What sucks about this is that I don't get at all hungry until 1700 or so.

 :-\
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