HotPepperIndex
Capsicum annuum

Jimmy Nardello

Ruoti village, Basilicata region, Italy
Mild
Also known asJimmy Nardello · Jimmy Nardello's Sweet Italian Frying Pepper · Nardello Pepper · Italian Frying Pepper
Scoville
0SHU
Heat0%
0–500 SHU · Synthesized from multiple botanical, grower, and seed references

An exceptional sweet Italian heirloom frying pepper celebrated for its long, thin, wrinkled pods that deliver an intensely sweet, fruity, candy-like flavor when fried or roasted — often called one of the very best frying peppers with zero heat.

The Jimmy Nardello pepper, also known as Jimmy Nardello’s Sweet Italian Frying Pepper, is a classic annuum heirloom originating from the Basilicata region of southern Italy. Its pods are long and slender (typically 6–10 inches), slightly curved or wrinkled with thin, glossy skin that ripens from green through streaked burgundy to a brilliant fire-engine red. The plant grows compact and highly productive, usually 2–3 feet tall, with excellent yields even in varied climates. It offers a rich, sweet, fruity taste with no detectable heat, becoming creamy and tender when cooked while retaining vibrant color. This versatile pepper excels in traditional Italian preparations but has become a favorite among modern gardeners and chefs for its exceptional sweetness and ease of use in fresh, grilled, roasted, or preserved dishes.

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Backstory

Originating in the home gardens of the Basilicata region of Italy, this heirloom was carried across the Atlantic in 1887 by Giuseppe and Angella Nardello along with their daughter Anna. Settling in Naugatuck, Connecticut, the family continued growing and saving the seeds for generations. Their son Jimmy became an avid gardener, maintaining the variety through terraced gardens and winter drying traditions. Before his death in 1983, Jimmy donated the seeds to the Seed Savers Exchange, preserving the legacy for future generations. It has since earned a place in the Slow Food Ark of Taste and become a beloved favorite among home gardeners and chefs for its unmatched sweetness and versatility.

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Flavor

Intensely sweet and fruity with candy-like richness and subtle floral notes; completely heat-free or nearly so, developing a creamy, tender texture and enhanced sweetness when fried, grilled, or roasted while retaining vibrant red color.

sweetfruitycandy-likerichcreamy-when-cooked

Culinary uses

frying and sautéinggrilling and roastingpickling and preservingdrying for winter useantipasto plattersfresh eating or saladssauces, relishes, and stuffings

Q&A

Substitutions

Cubanelle (similar frying use)Italian Long Hot (if mild heat desired)

Related variants

Appearance

Skin
thin, glossy, slightly wrinkled
Flesh
thin-walled, tender, crisp when raw
Seeds
few cream-colored seeds
Shape
long slender slightly curved or wrinkled horn-shaped
Width
1-1.5 inches
Length
6-10 inches (15-25 cm)
Color dried
deep red
Color fresh
green to streaked burgundy to bright fire-engine red

Growing

Soil
fertile, well-drained, slightly acidic to neutral (pH 6.0-7.0)
Notes
Exceptionally adaptable heirloom; performs well in both northern short seasons and southern heat; prolific yields; excellent for containers or ground; fruits dry easily on the plant or strung for storage; disease-resistant and widely adapted
Starting
start seeds indoors 8-10 weeks before last frost
Sunlight
full sun (6-8+ hours daily)
Watering
consistent moisture without waterlogging
Plant height
2-3 feet, compact and highly productive
Days to maturity
75-90 days from transplant

Nutrition

Benefits
Supports immune function, vision, and skin health with natural antioxidant properties
Calories
Very low calorie
Key nutrients
Vitamin C (high), Vitamin A, Antioxidants including carotenoids, Potassium

Origin detail

Region
Basilicata region
Country
Italy
Breeder
Traditional Italian heirloom (Nardello family)

Tags

sweetannuumitalianfryingheirloomfruitythin-skinnedno-heat

Sources

Huge shout-out to the breeders, growers, researchers, and seed savers linked below — their independent work is what lets us fact-check our own. Go visit them.

These references are used to verify what we publish — not as the source of the content itself. Seed catalogs, breeder pages, research papers, and cultivar databases let us cross-check every fact before it lands here. Open any card to read the original or dig deeper.

11 sources · Added May 11, 2026, 09:25 UTC · Updated May 11, 2026, 10:58 UTC
Origins
A World of Capsicum
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