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Vegetable Crops

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Title: Vegetable Crops Lesson 2 Author: Stephen L. Love Last modified by: Love Created Date: 8/11/2000 1:36:06 AM Document presentation format – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Vegetable Crops


1
Vegetable Crops PLSC 451/551Lesson 17, Pepper,
Eggplant
  • Instructor
  • Stephen L. Love
  • Aberdeen R E Center
  • 1693 S 2700 W
  • Aberdeen, ID 83210
  • Phone 397-4181 Fax 397-4311
  • Email slove_at_uidaho.edu

2
Pepper
  • Daniel Pinkwater
  • It doesnt matter who you are, or what youve
    done, or think you can do. Theres a
    confrontation with destiny awaiting you.
    Somewhere, there is a chili you cannot eat.

3
Pepper
  • Consumer use
  • Pungency
  • Due to a single compound capsaicin
  • Present in the septa and placenta
  • Controlled by a single gene
  • Detectable at 1 ppm
  • Paprika flavor due to the compound capsanthin

4
Pepper
  • Consumer use
  • Pungency
  • Varies widely among types and varieties
  • Measured using Scoville units
  • Bell 0 units
  • Ancho 1,000 units
  • Jalapenos 5,000 units
  • Yellow wax 10,000 units
  • Tabasco 160,000 units
  • Habaneros 200,000 units

5
Caribbean Red Habanero, rated 400,000 on the
Scoville scale
6
Pepper
  • Species used for food
  • Capsicum annuum
  • Origin Columbia, Central America, SW N.
    America
  • Worldwide production
  • Includes most of the common sweet and hot
    peppers Bell
  • Jalapeno
  • Wax
  • Cayenne
  • Serrano

7
Pepper
  • Species used for food
  • Capsicum frutescens
  • Origin Amazon, related to C. chinense
  • Grown in China and tropical America
  • Considered to be semi-domesticated
  • Includes Tabasco, Thai, and malagueta peppers

8
Pepper
  • Species used for food
  • Capsicum chinense
  • Origin - Amazon
  • Includes the most pungent of all peppers
  • Habanero
  • Naga
  • Datil
  • (includes naga varieties of over 1,000,000
    Scoville units)

9
Pepper
  • Species used for food
  • Capsicum baccatum
  • Origin Bolivia
  • Unique fruity flavor
  • Includes aji (Peruvian puff) peppers
  • Use limited to South America

10
Pepper
  • Species used for food
  • Capsicum pubescens
  • Origin - Central America and Andes
  • Use limited to areas of origin
  • The goat chili, adapted to cool highland
    climates

11
Pepper types and varieties
12
Pepper
  • Use and importance
  • The predominant worldwide spice crop
  • Emerged as a replacement for expensive black
    pepper
  • Produced and consumed throughout the world
  • Largest production is in Asia and Africa
  • Important source of vitamin A, vitamin C and many
    minerals

13
Worldwide pepper production
14
Pepper drying in Korea
15
Pepper
  • Consumer use
  • Spices
  • Paprika dried and ground non-pungent peppers
  • Chili powder dried and ground pungent peppers
    mixed with oregano, cumin, garlic
  • Curry dried and ground pungent peppers mixed
    with turmeric, cumin, coriander

16
Pepper
  • Production Systems/Market Opportunities
  • Produced worldwide in subsistence and market
    garden systems
  • Excellent subject for local market sales, organic
    production
  • Modern intensive production common in the warmest
    temperate and dry sub-tropical climate in both
    the northern and southern hemisphere
  • Fresh markets, contract for processing, spices

17
Pepper morphology
18
Pepper
  • Taxonomy
  • Dicotyledon
  • Family Solanaceae
  • Genus and species Capsicum annuum
  • Related species tomato, potato, nightshade

19
Pepper
  • Domestication
  • Endemic to tropical and subtropical America
  • Evidence in Mexico earlier than 5000 BC
  • Spread throughout the world by Spanish and
    Portuguese traders

20
Pepper
  • Fruit set
  • Temperature sensitive
  • Pollen death and abscission gt90 or lt60
  • Optimum set at 70-80
  • Drought stress causes flower drop
  • Long-term temps higher than 95 cause abnormal
    fruit growth

21
Pepper
  • Production Problems
  • Subject to many of the diseases and insect
    problems common to tomatoes
  • Pest problems do not tend to limit production in
    warm climates

22
Pepper
  • Harvest
  • Harvest Indices
  • Green Harvest (salad or green-processed use)
  • Desired size, lack of color change, waxy surface
  • Mature harvest (dried and/or ground use)
  • Fully developed color (yellow, orange, or red)
  • Attached pedicel
  • Firmness retained for processed
  • Partially desiccated for dehydration

23
Why did the tomato blush?
24
Why did the tomato blush? It saw the salad
dressing.
25
Eggplant (Brinjal)
  • Taxonomy
  • Dicotyledon
  • Family Solanaceae
  • Genus and species Solanum melongena
  • Related species potato, tomato, pepper,
    nightshade

26
Eggplant
  • Botany
  • Short-lived perennial, grown as an annual
  • Bush-type growth 2-8 feet in height
  • Fruit are round, pear-shaped, or elongated
  • Fruit is a berry without a cavity
  • Internal texture is due to spongy placental
    tissue
  • Wild type fruits are bitter and spiny

27
Eggplant
28
Eggplant
29
Eggplant
  • Origin and Domestication
  • Native to India
  • Center of diversity in Bangladesh and Myanmar
  • Spread to China by 500 BC
  • Taken to Africa and Spain by Arabic traders

30
Eggplant
  • Importance and use
  • Predominantly a product of subsistence and market
    garden agriculture
  • A staple crop in many tropical Asian countries

31
Eggplant
  • Importance and use
  • Largely used as a fresh market vegetable
  • Seldom processed or eaten raw
  • Prepared boiled, baked, fried, and stuffed
  • Few calories but important source of protein,
    vitamin A, minerals

32
Eggplant
  • Varieties
  • Many types
  • Oval or round, dark purple - most common
  • Black Beauty, Florida Market, Classic
  • Other countries produce white, yellow, brown,
    and green types with round, oval, pear-shaped,
    and long shapes
  • China produces decorative types with scarlet fruit

33
Eggplant
  • Range of types

34
Eggplant
  • Harvest and Storage
  • Edible when 1/3 to fully grown
  • Best quality when about 1/2 to 2/3 full size
  • Thumb-press test
  • Retention of glossy surface
  • Hand harvested
  • Continuous harvest necessary to maintain
    production

35
Pepino fruit
36
Other Solanaceous Fruits
  • Pepino
  • Species Solanum muricatum
  • Perennial from Ecuador and Peru
  • Bear for several years once established
  • Immature fruit are cooked
  • Mature fruit are eaten raw as a dessert (sweet,
    with a cucumber flavor)
  • Market garden production on South America
  • Ethnic markets in Australia, New Zealand, US

37
Tamarillo fruit
38
Other Solanaceous Fruits
  • Tamarillo (tree tomato)
  • Species Cyphomandra betacea
  • Native of Peru (Andes)
  • Perennial shrub up to 15 feet tall
  • Usually cultured for 5-6 years, then replaced
  • Acidic, tomato-like flavor
  • Usually stewed or juiced, can be eaten raw
  • Export production in New Zealand, Portugal
    market garden and subsistence elsewhere

39
Tomatillo fruit
40
Other Solanaceous Fruits
  • Tomatillo (husk tomato)
  • Species Physalis philadelphica
  • Mexican origin
  • Annual plants up to 3 feet tall
  • Fruit becomes less acid and sweeter at maturity
  • Macerated immature fruit are used for sauces
    (salsa verde) and other purposes
  • Market garden in Latin America, widely grown in
    Europe

41
Naranjilla
42
Other Solanaceous Fruits
  • Naranjilla (Lulo)
  • Species Solanum quitoense
  • Native of Ecuador and southern Columbia
  • Perennial semi-shrub 3-6 feet tall, grows best in
    shade
  • Acidic, whitish-green flesh, flavored like
    orange, pineapple, and tomato
  • Popular for juices, preserves, and desserts
  • Local production in Central and South America

43
Cape gooseberry
44
Other Solanaceous Fruits
  • Cape Gooseberry
  • Species Physalis peruviana
  • Native of the Andean region (named after imported
    into South Africa)
  • Perennial bush, 3 feet tall (tetraploid)
  • Eaten raw or in preserves and sauces
  • Subsistence and market production, being accepted
    on a worldwide scale

45
Turkeyberry
46
Other Solanaceous Fruits
  • Turkeyberry
  • Species Solanum torvum (noxious weed in US)
  • South and North American origin
  • Perennial tree or shrub
  • Immature fruit used as cooked vegetable
  • Common in Thai and Lao cuisine
  • Small-scale market garden production

47
Jilo fruit
48
Other Solanaceous Fruits
  • Jilo (Garden Egg, Scarlet Eggplant)
  • Species Solanum gilo
  • Native to central Africa
  • Brought to South America with slave trade
  • Bitter, immature fruit are used for seasoning
  • Market garden production in Brazil, used little
    in place of origin

49
African eggplant
50
Other Solanaceous Fruits
  • African Eggplant
  • Species Solanum macrocarpon
  • Native of West Africa
  • Berries like small eggplants in appearance and
    use
  • Subsistence and market garden production mostly
    in Indonesia and Suriname
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