the trail went very cold... firstly, dewitt's fiery foods newsletter info request drew a blank. secondly, a message posted in a chiapas travelling forum was answered as follows: "El chile que se muestra en la foto, en Chiapas es nombrado chile blanco (no es siete caldos) no tengo alguna imagen de chile siete caldos pero lo puedes localizar en los mercados de Chiapas. Lo que puedo decir es que el nivel de picante no es tan alto como su nombre lo indica." (the chile shown in the photo is known in chiapas as white chilli (it isn't the siete caldos). i do not have any image of the siete caldos but you can find it in the markets in chiapas. what I can say is that its heat is not as high as its name implies). back to square one...
then, out of the blue the trail heated up with an unexpected email from johnny n. olsen (here's his malus rustika chilli web site), saying that he had grew a chilli paloma (pictured) in 2003 from seeds purchased at örtagardens plantskola in denmark. the örtagardens site describes it as an annuum that "Gulvit till orange-röd, ca. 3 cm, lite bullig men spetsig. Het till mycket het. Går bra att torka och mala. Sätter rikligt med frukt." (yellow-white to orange – red, about 3 cm, a little bumpy but pointy, hot to very hot. great for drying and powdering. Yields very well). despite the chilli matched the long-solís book description other than the purple patches, its origin needed to be ascertained. an email to örtagardens was quickly replied by rune brand: "We got the seeds from friends who traveled in Mexico 1993. They bought it in San Cristobal Chiapas and we have been growing it since then and its quite popular amongst our customers. Yours Rune". hurray!
now, i got a hunch. the chile paloma pictured sounds and looks very similar to another one called pico de paloma (pictured next). have found references to de pico de paloma in chiapas, tabasco & yucatan and long-solís describes the pico de paloma as chile de árbol... could all of them be related?
on the other hand, doing some more internet detective work, found a siete caldos hit in flickr from a guy called caracobar, looking 100% pubescens. doesn't say where it is taken but caracobar's album is full of pics from guatemala (confirming that rocotos are also called siete caldos there).
Friday, 19 October 2007
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