





Green Chile Seeds
Discover all of the Green Chile Seeds Sandia Seed has to offer,...

Best Peppers for Containers
If you want to grow peppers in containers, below are our top...
Sandia Seed Company
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Ignite your garden and your taste buds with Fatalii Pepper Seeds, an exceptionally hot heirloom variety bursting with fruity citrus flavor. These rare yellow peppers pack a punch at 300,000 Scoville Heat Units—perfect for adventurous growers and heat seekers.
This Capsicum chinense heirloom offers a unique African-Caribbean heritage, transported from Central America to Africa in the 1700s. Unlike ordinary super-hot peppers, Fatalii delivers:
Each packet contains 10 premium heirloom seeds with expert growing instructions:
1. Start indoors 8 weeks before last frost
2. Maintain 85°F soil temp for germination (7-21 days)
3. Transplant after 6 true leaves develop
4. Space 24" apart in nutrient-rich soil
Pro Tip: The bright yellow color signals peak flavor-perfect for making our signature Fatalii Pepper Salsa!
Ready to cultivate one of the world's most flavorful super-hots? Add these heirloom Fatalii Pepper Seeds to your cart today and experience citrus-fired heat you can't find in stores!
Fruity, delicious in fresh pico-de-gallo.
Simply amazing. Very hot, with a rich, *VERY PROMINENT* tropical scent, like a mango tree in summer. The flavour profile makes them ideal for fermentation into hot sauce. Incidentally, Sandia's Fatalii seeds germinated 90% for me and the plants were prolific, and I'm in the Pacific Northwest, so both observations are exceptional.
We raised every seed we had germinate, which was 100% and had so many peppers to work with, we make Fatali Jam, and use the Fatali in our Chili soup. Excellent Experience.
P.s. we still have many frozen!
We grew these Fatalii seeds and the seeds nearly all germinated, so we had more plants than we needed. (We shared them with fellow gardeners :)
The plants we kept were loaded with tons of Fatali peppers that just kept coming. We put them in salsas, and let some of the peppers dry out and ground into hot pepper flakes.
We'll grow these every year!
Candied jalapeños, are also known as Cowboy Candy, and Cowgirl Candy refers to a variation that includes pineapple for a sweeter, making a more tropical flavor. This recipe makes a...
Candied jalapeños, are also known as Cowboy Candy, and Cowgirl Candy refers to a variation that includes pineapple for a sweeter, making a more tropical flavor. This recipe makes a...
We are so excited for our new 2026 Seed Catalog, packed with peppers, tomatoes, veggies and lots of recipes, growing tips and pepper growing info. Here's a sneak peak at...
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Wondering how to get tomatoes to ripen on the vine? Did you know that picking ripe (or near ripe) tomatoes on your plants can speed up ripening of the the...
Wondering how to get tomatoes to ripen on the vine? Did you know that picking ripe (or near ripe) tomatoes on your plants can speed up ripening of the the...
Discover all of the Green Chile Seeds Sandia Seed has to offer,...
If you want to grow peppers in containers, below are our top...
I grow your basil seeds every year, they are easy to start from seed and grow into nice bushy plants that we harvest all summer long to use to make caprese salads (when the tomatoes start to ripen), as well as pesto. I like to make a big batch of pesto, then freeze "pucks" of it in a muffin tray to store in a container in the freezer for some summer flavors all winter long. These seeds always have great germination. I also like to let a couple of basil plants bloom as the pollinators love the blooms and they are pretty, too!
Bought the Green Chile Intro - 3-Pack and was able to start indoors the Big Jim Legacy and Sandia Select with a 100% germination rate thanks to the clear instructions provided. As of Mid July in NC zone 7A on the 8 chile plants(6 Big Jim, 2 Sandia) in the garden I have 5-7 large chiles per plant. The smallest chiles are over 7” and I’m already getting another flush of flowers for round 2 of delicious peppers. Highly recommend these chiles!!!
My sister loves gardening, and is quite a seed collector and grower. She'll love all these classic varieties to add to her garden and seed box. Zucchini are an old stand-by, as well as pumpkins, beans, radishes and more. She's never grown spaghetti squash, so that will be a fun addition.
Perfect looking tomatoes in a golden color with hints of red, they are gorgeous. These Rainbow Tomatoes were definitely the most productive tomatoes of the season last year, so our countertop bowl was filled with their golden deliciousness.
Make sure to use a sturdy tomato cage (not those wirey floppy ones that they most commonly sell!) - we ended up using some wood stakes to create a frame around the plants as they were so huge and loaded with fruit later in the season.
We just planted our seedlings for these this year, looking forward to watching them grow!
Germination for nearly all of my varieties was 3-5 days (95% - 100% success rate). My varieties include: Red Ghost, Carolina Reaper, Trinidad Scorpion, Devils Tongue, Cayenne Ring of Fire, Habenero Red, Yellow Jamaican, Paprika Numex, and Bolivian Rainbow. Another thing that I really appreciated is that each packet seemed to contain 20% more seeds than indicated (each 10 seed pack contained 12 seeds) - Not sure if that is standard but it was a nice bonus.
One of the best cherry tomatoes you'll ever eat!
I've found that when you combine roasted carrots, habaneros, lime juice and garlic, it will make the best hot sauce of your life. I think it's the sweetness and depth of the carrots that make the sauce even better, and pairs perfectly with the habanero heat. I got the inspiration from one of my favorite store-bought hot sauces, Marie Sharp's Habanero hot sauce. Sometimes I add some of your Chef's orange tomatoes too to make more of it, and they also give more flavor to the hot sauce and help tame the heat a bit. I grow these in my garden every year along with your orange habaneros, orange tomatoes and other hot peppers and veggies. Very reliable.
These fabulous peppers added lots of color to our patio pots. So pretty in multiple colors, plus you can pick them and add to salsa for a nice spicy kick. These are fun in any ornamental edible garden.
We let these hang dry, then ground them up – they made the tastiest pepper flakes. They have a nice kick, but good flavor too. Easy to grow plants, pretty peppers.
Great seeds, good germination, plants grow quickly and produce lots of pods for roasting. Great flavor and just the right amount of spice. We grow these every year in our garden in Utah.
These are so beautiful, tasty, and meaty. They make a great pico-de-gallo!
These were so big, one tomato can make a nice big bowl of salsa. They do have amazing flavor and color.
These were so tasty and very productive. Great for salsa.
I tried these purple Cherokee seeds on 2024. This is the first time growing these purple Cherokees and were amazed at the ease of germination and taste
These germinated in two days. I started them in midsummer and they fruited by late fall in my zone 10b garden and are overwintering just fine. I’ll have more to harvest by late spring. I made my red sauce for pozole for Christmas with my harvest!
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