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The Field Guide to Peppers

di Dave DeWitt, Janie Lamson

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In this fiery guide, Dave DeWitt and Janie Lamson help you identify hundreds of the most popular chile pepper varieties. The 400 profiles include all the major types of peppers and are packed with information on culinary use, interesting facts, and chile nomenclature.--COVER.
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A handy reference for the 400 most common varieties of pepper with useful notes on growing time, how to best use peppers (for stuffing, salsas, canning, etc.). I did feel like this was sort of like a catalog for coauthor Jamie's website/nursery, but they also included a list of other growers to get seeds/plants from at the end too. ( )
  Daumari | Dec 30, 2017 |
This review was originally posted on the NYBG Plant Talk blog:
http://blogs.nybg.org/plant-talk/2016/01/from-the-library/from-the-library-the-f...

The Field Guide to Peppers promises to help readers achieve two things: “to identify unfamiliar pepper varieties … and to assist in the selection of peppers” for inclusion in gardens. Authors Dave DeWitt and Janie Lamson bring extensive expertise and differing strengths to this publication. DeWitt, known to some as the “Pope of Peppers,” has authored over 30 books related to peppers and spicy foods. Lamson, the “Chile Goddess,” is the owner of Cross Country Nurseries in New Jersey and grows and sells all 400 pepper varieties covered in Field Guide.

Field Guide is undeniably attractive even at first glance, with bold and colorful cover art. A quick skim through the book heightens the appeal, bright red pages and accents complementing full-color photos of all 400 peppers. Most readers likely have a favorite pepper, and I found the images of jalapeños to be especially attractive.

While this book is suggested as a tool for both pepper identification and selecting peppers to grow, it seems to be more focused on the latter than the former, as the botanical details are rather limited. However, with the photographs provided, the text could indeed serve as a field guide for the home gardener. The text is helpfully organized by common pepper species—Capsicum annuum, C. baccatum, C. chinense, C. frutescens, and C. pubescens. Capsicum annuum is further divided into pod types, owing to the number of varieties within the group. In terms of selecting peppers for home gardens, this book is especially useful. Comments from the authors accompany each and every pepper, ranging from historical facts to cooking suggestions to alternative names. Origin, pod description, size and color, time of harvest, and heat level are also indicated. Scoville Heat Units (SHU) are the basis of the heat levels defined by the authors (“sweet” to “super hot”), but readers should note that an exact SHU is not given for each pepper.

Reading this book, I occasionally found myself wishing that there was a way for me to isolate peppers based on criteria such as heat level. Field Guide includes a single index of pepper names, but does not index the peppers in any other way. However, Chile Plants, Janie Lamson’s website, allows the pepper enthusiast to search for peppers using 15 criteria—from heat, to color, to season, to species. The site is truly a companion piece to Field Guide and also a source for purchasing all of the 400 varieties described in the print book.

The Complete Chili Pepper Book by Dave DeWitt, Timber Press
The Complete Chili Pepper Book by Dave DeWitt, Timber Press

Field Guide is not intended as a gardening guide, although “A Brief Guide to Growing” occupies 10 pages of text toward the start of the book—sans images. DeWitt’s 2014 The Complete Chile Pepper Book (also from Timber Press) is suggested by the authors as a resource for those interested in learning more about growing peppers. The Edible Pepper Garden by Rosalind Creasy is another excellent book on this topic.

All said, The Field Guide to Peppers is both a beautiful and informative work, best supplemented with additional print and electronic resources from both DeWitt and Lamson. ( )
  orangewords | Feb 5, 2016 |
Dave DeWitt has been working with peppers for decades, is the founder of Chile Pepper magazine, and has been dubbed “The Pope of Peppers”. Jamie Lamson is the “Chile Goddess”, and the owner of ChilePlants.com, which grows 500 varieties of hot and sweet peppers and ships plants in spring and fresh chilies in September. This duo is uniquely suited to write the definitive book on peppers.

The book covers the five main domesticated species of peppers; Capsicum annuum has a number of subsets such as jalapenos, Europeans, pimentos, wax, Asians, and bells so that section is subdivided. Did you know that there are 27 different named cultivars of cayenne peppers alone? Each entry has a color photograph, the cultivar name, where the pepper first came into cultivation, the size of the plant and of the pod, the time to harvest, and the heat level. Here’s the only problem I have with the book: they give the heat levels by ‘mild, medium, hot,” etc instead of the Scoville units for the peppers. There is a chart that tells what the range of Scoville units is for each category, but still, ‘Medium’ covers 2500 to 10,000 Scoville units and that’s a heck of a range. I’d prefer to see the actual SHU for each pepper. Some entries also have comments about the pepper, such as uses in cuisine, growing tips, etc.

I think it’s a great book; I get so confused looking over huge sections of pepper seeds and wondering how they compare to each other. This book will unravel a lot of that confusion. This would be a great reference for the chilehead on your holiday gift giving list. ( )
  lauriebrown54 | Nov 22, 2015 |
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Lamson, Janieautore principaletutte le edizioniconfermato
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In this fiery guide, Dave DeWitt and Janie Lamson help you identify hundreds of the most popular chile pepper varieties. The 400 profiles include all the major types of peppers and are packed with information on culinary use, interesting facts, and chile nomenclature.--COVER.

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