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Biquinho, Button Red - Capsicum frutescens

Capsicum frutescens Button Red
Bell pepper, Sweet pepper

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This chilli forms a compact, decorative, and productive plant, perfect in a pot on the terrace or balcony. Its small fruits are pendulous, drop-shaped, about 2.5 cm, bright red when ripe. One young plant can produce more than 75 fruits in a season. Their flavour is mild, with a rather fruity and pleasant profile. It is an annual plant, demanding warmth and requiring very rich soil. Plant in spring, for a harvest from late July to October.
Ease of cultivation
Beginner
Height at maturity
50 cm
Spread at maturity
35 cm
Exposure
Sun
Soil moisture
Moist soil
Best planting time April to May
Recommended planting time March to June
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Flowering time June to September
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Harvest time July to September
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Description

The Button Red Chilli (of the Biquinho type) is an ornamental and flavourful variety with a compact habit and very high yield, very well-suited to growing in a pot. Its small, teardrop-shaped fruits ripen to a shiny red, offering a fruity and mild flavour that suits sensitive palates. In cooking, it is excellent pickled in vinegar, but also as a condiment, in marinades, or to liven up a salad. To enjoy it fully, plant it in a sunny, sheltered, warm spot, in rich, moist, and well-drained soil.

The Chilli, like its very close relative the Bell Pepper, belongs to the Solanaceae family. It was consumed by the Incas from 7500 BC and has been cultivated since 3000 BC. The chilli is a perennial plant in a tropical climate, grown as an annual in our latitudes. It produces small, greenish-white flowers with anthers or seeds of different colours depending on the species.

The Button Red chilli is a horticultural selection of Capsicum, most often classified under the Capsicum chinense complex in "biquinho/button" catalogues. In practice, "Button Red" is considered a red biquinho: it is also found under the names Biquinho (Red), Little Beak, Chupetinho/Chupetinha, or Sweety Drop (for the pickled version). The "biquinho" type is strongly associated with Brazil. The plant forms a very compact, small undershrub, 45–60 cm tall, with dense branching. Its flowers are self-fertile and pollinated by insects.
The fruits of Button Red are fleshy berries, in a "mini" format: they are pendulous, with a rounded base ending in a small point, measuring approximately 2.5 cm long by 1.5 cm wide, and change from green to bright red when ripe. This variety is distinguished by a very high yield (75 fruits or more per plant under favourable conditions) and by a low level of heat, related to its capsaicin content. It is evaluated around 500 SHU on the Scoville scale. The flesh is rather thin, and the fruit can be consumed whole. Its aromatic profile is described as fruity, pleasant, with a chilli "kick" without being aggressive.

Chilli peppers are naturally rich in vitamin C, about twice as much as lemons or oranges. It is a very volatile substance whose content reduces considerably as the chilli dries. It becomes even scarcer when ground into powder. It is also very rich in vitamin A, which is more stable and whose content increases as the fruit dries.

Harvest period and method. Harvest from July to October, continuously, as soon as the fruits have reached their full size and also their final colour (red for a more developed flavour). It is best to cut the stalk with secateurs, leaving a small piece of stem: this avoids tearing off a branch and stimulates further production.

Storage. For short-term storage, keep them in the salad drawer of the refrigerator: they will keep for 1 to 2 weeks. You can freeze them. And, of course, the classic biquinho method: pickling in vinegar, which keeps the crunch and makes a quick condiment.

Culinary uses. Button Red is a chilli "for flavour" more than "for heat": it can easily be eaten whole, in salads, as a topping for dishes, or to add a decorative red touch. Its best use remains pickles: these fruits are perfect for appetisers, on a cheeseboard, in a sandwich, or even as a cocktail garnish.

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Peppers and Chillis: sowing, growing, harvesting
Family sheet
by Solenne 11 min.
Peppers and Chillis: sowing, growing, harvesting
Read article

Biquinho, Button Red - Capsicum frutescens in pictures

Biquinho, Button Red - Capsicum frutescens (Harvest) Harvest

Harvest

Harvest time July to September
Type of vegetable Fruit vegetable
Vegetable colour red
Size of vegetable Small
Interest Flavour, Nutritional value, Colour, Productive
Flavour Sweet
Use Cooking

Plant habit

Height at maturity 50 cm
Spread at maturity 35 cm
Growth rate fast

Foliage

Foliage persistence Deciduous
Foliage colour medium green
Product reference255920

Planting and care

Growing a Button Red Chilli requires warmth. Plant in spring, from March-April under cover, or outdoors after the last frosts in spring.

Initially, grow on the plug plants or young plants by transplanting them into trays or 8 to 13 cm diameter pots, filled with compost. Place them in a warm, bright location. Water regularly.

In the ground: Plant in the ground when the soil is sufficiently warmed, and the risk of frost has passed, around mid-May. Choose a very sunny and sheltered spot. Peppers and Chillies appreciate very rich, light, and well-drained soils. In the previous autumn, add well-rotted compost.

Space the young plants 50 cm apart in all directions. Dig a hole (3 times the volume of the root ball), add well-rotted compost to the bottom of the planting hole, place the root ball and cover with soil. Firm well and water.

At the start of cultivation, cover with a removable tunnel to gain a few degrees, especially in cooler regions. Hoe and weed carefully as the roots are shallow. Then, install a mulch.

In a pot: Choose a pot at least 30 cm deep. Place a layer of gravel or clay pebbles at the bottom of the pot to aid drainage. Fill the pot with a mixture of compost and well-rotted compost. Place the root ball and cover with soil. Firm well and water. Place the pot in the sun. Feed regularly.

Install stakes. Water regularly at the base of the young plants.

It is advisable to pinch out Chilli and Pepper plants, especially in cool regions. When the plants have 10 to 15 fruits, cut the tips of the stems one leaf above the last fruit.

In the vegetable garden, plant flowers nearby to attract pollinating insects. In terms of crop rotation, wait 3 years before growing Solanaceae in the same place.

Cultivation

Best planting time April to May
Recommended planting time March to June

Care

Soil moisture Tolerant
Disease resistance Good

Intended location

Type of use Container, Vegetable garden, Greenhouse, Conservatory
Ease of cultivation Beginner
Soil light
Exposure Sun
Soil pH Any
Soil type Silty-loamy (rich and light) 130

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