Fruits grown from our hot pepper varieties, including a bright mix of reds, oranges, greens, and yellows.

Hot Pepper Seeds

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Vigorous and uniform Johnny's-bred pepperoncini.
Early and adaptable poblano, easy to peel for chile rellenos.
Our most versatile and flavorful cayenne.
Easier to harvest, large-fruited serrano.
Extra-early hybrid habanero; good yields in North, short-season areas.
Open-pollinated jalapeño with more skin checking than our hybrids.
Super-hot! Pungent habanero for fresh, dried use, and "jerk" sauces.
Higher-yielding Red Rocket type for ristras.
Hot cherry for stuffing, pickling, and processing.
Early Anaheim bred by Johnny's for good productivity in cooler areas.
Spicy flavor for a new take on the traditional shishito.
Magnificent fruits; earlier, more productive than regular habaneros.
Large, widely adapted Anaheim with thick walls.
Anaheim with Phytophthora resistance.
Full bacterial leaf spot (BLS) resistance.
Widely-adapted, thin-walled Fresno with very good, mildly hot flavor.
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High-yielding yellow or "Caribe" type jalapeño.
Sale
Famous Spanish heirloom, eaten as tapas (appetizers) in Spain.
Sale
High-yielding, widely adapted Santa Fe/Guero Chile pepper.
Early Thai-type pepper.
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Large, highly adaptable poblano ideal for chile rellenos.
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Tropical flavors with a hint of heat.
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Red habanero without the heat.
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High-yielding, continuous-set type.
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Early, quick-drying for ristras.
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Best combination of earliness and yield in a jalapeno.
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Big, smooth, dark green fruits.
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Hot peppers (also called chili peppers) come in all shapes, sizes, colors, and flavors. They are an essential ingredient in specialty and ethnic cuisines, eaten fresh or dried, or fashioned into decorative ristras or wreaths.


Hot Pepper Heat Levels

The level of intensity—from mild to mouth-blistering super-hot peppers—is measured using the Scoville scale:; the higher the number, the hotter the pepper. Johnny's shorthand for heat scale is 1 to 5 small pepper symbols, with 5 being the hottest.


Choosing Hot Pepper Types & Varieties


How to Grow Hot Peppers