Friariello Napoletano Sweet Pepper Seeds (Capsicum annuum) Italian heirloom pepper producing small sweet green fruits; tender, flavorful, and ideal for sautéing and traditional dishes

Friariello Napoletano Sweet Pepper Seeds (Capsicum annuum) Italian heirloom pepper producing small sweet green fruits; tender, flavorful, and ideal for sautéing and traditional dishes

Brand: terramatergardens
SKU: 11429
2.99 USD In stock Buy at Merchant

Minimum: 10+ Seeds Friariello Napoletano — The Neapolitan Frying Pepper That Changes Everything You Know About Green Peppers If you have eaten in a real Neapolitan kitchen you already know this pepper. Small, slender, pale green, cooked in olive oil until collapsed and lightly blistered, finished with nothing but salt. One of the most satisfying things that comes out of a summer kitchen. Friariello Napoletano is not trying to be anything other than what it is. That is exactly why it is irreplaceable. Who Grows Friariello Napoletano? Italian home cooks and their descendants searching for authentic seed. Food travelers who encountered friarielli in Naples and came home wanting to recreate it. Chefs who understand that traditional dishes taste right only with traditional ingredients. Market gardeners who want a specialty Italian variety that stands apart from standard sweet pepper offerings. And gardeners who have learned the most rewarding varieties are rarely the ones on the front of the seed rack. What This Pepper Actually Is Friariello Napoletano is a small, elongated sweet frying pepper native to the Naples region of Campania. Fruits are harvested young and green at 2 to 4 inches, when texture is tender and flavor is light, grassy, and gently sweet with a character distinctly different from any other frying pepper in the Italian repertoire. The name comes from the Neapolitan verb friarello, to fry, which tells you everything about how this pepper is meant to be cooked. Plants set clusters of small curved fruits through a long summer season. Thin skin means they cook in minutes, collapsing beautifully and absorbing olive oil with a willingness that thicker-walled varieties never match. In the Kitchen Sautéed in Olive Oil: The defining preparation. Whole peppers in good olive oil over medium-high heat until blistered and tender. Salt at the end. Nothing else needed. With Eggs: A classic Neapolitan combination. Collapsed peppers folded into scrambled eggs or fried together in the same pan. Pizza Topping: Scattered over Neapolitan pizza before baking where they char slightly and become something extraordinary. Pasta: Tossed through spaghetti with olive oil, garlic, and pasta water for a fast, deeply satisfying weeknight dish. With Grilled Meats: Classic southern Italian accompaniment to sausage and pork where sweet pepper cuts through richness. Pickled: Preserved in white wine vinegar for a bright summer flavor that carries through winter. Growing Friariello Napoletano From Seed Starting Indoors: 8 to 10 weeks before last frost with bottom heat between 75 and 85 degrees Fahrenheit. Germination: 10 to 21 days with heat. Cold trays produce slow uneven results. A seedling mat is strongly recommended. Transplanting: After last frost when nights hold above 55 degrees. Cold soil stalls pepper growth significantly. Sunlight: Full sun, 6 to 8 hours minimum. More sun means faster fruit set and better flavor. Soil: Rich, well-draining, slightly acidic. Consistent moisture without waterlogging. Spacing: 18 to 24 inches apart for airflow and reduced disease pressure. Fertilizing: Balanced feed at transplant, then lower nitrogen and higher phosphorus once flowering begins. Harvest: Pick young and green at 2 to 4 inches for the tender mild flavor this variety is grown for. Hardiness: Warm-season annual, Zones 5 to 11. Performs beautifully in hot summers mirroring its Campanian origins. Before You Close This Page Friariello Napoletano makes you understand why people save seeds and pass them down. Not just a pepper. A preparation, a tradition, a specific flavor belonging to a specific place that no grocery store can approximate. Open-pollinated Italian heirloom seeds, limited availability. Grow them, heat the olive oil, and cook something that tastes exactly like it should.

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