HotPepperIndex
Capsicum annuum

Piment Gorria

Basque Country, France
Mild
Also known asGorria · Piment d'Espelette · Espelette Pepper · Ezpeletako Biperra
Scoville
0SHU
Heat0%
2k–4k SHU · Chili Pepper Madness and Wikipedia

Piment Gorria is the heirloom Capsicum annuum variety behind the famous Piment d'Espelette spice. It produces elongated bright red pods with mild heat and a fruity, slightly smoky flavor. Cultivated for centuries in the French Basque region, it is central to Basque cuisine when fresh or dried.

Piment Gorria, known in Basque as the 'red' pepper, is the traditional cultivar that yields the protected Piment d'Espelette when grown in the specific Espelette communes. The plants are vigorous and productive, reaching 60-150 cm in height. Fruits are conical, 10-14 cm long, slightly curved with a pointed tip, thin slightly wrinkled skin, and thick flesh. They start green and ripen to a vibrant bright red. Flavor is fruity and fresh with gentle heat and subtle smokiness, reminiscent of roasted bell pepper or tomato when fresh; drying intensifies the smoky sweetness similar to smoked paprika. Heat is mild, ranging 1,500-4,000 SHU. In Basque cooking it features in piperade sauce, basquaise preparations with chicken or seafood, and as a versatile seasoning for meats, fish, vegetables, omelets, and cheeses. It is traditionally air-dried on strings and ground into powder or flakes, a premium spice protected by AOP designation since 2000. Introduced from the Americas in the 16th century and selectively bred locally, it represents one of Europe's oldest chili traditions and is celebrated at annual festivals in Espelette.

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Backstory

The Gorria variety has been grown in the Basque Country for centuries with the name Piment d'Espelette protected since 2000 for peppers from specific communes. Likely introduced from the Americas in the 16th century and selectively bred over generations it is central to Basque gastronomy and celebrated at annual festivals.

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Flavor

Fruity and fresh with mild hints of heat and slight smokiness; reminiscent of roasted bell pepper or tomato when fresh. Drying brings out a smoky sweetness similar to smoked paprika.

fruitysweetsmoky

Culinary uses

Basque cuisinepiperade sauceseasoning for meat fish and vegetablesdried powderpickling

Q&A

Substitutions

PimentoAleppoKashmiri ChiliCubanelle

Related variants

Appearance

Skin
thin slightly wrinkled
Color
starts green matures to bright vibrant red
Flesh
thick
Shape
elongated conical often slightly curved with pointed tip
Length
10-14 cm (4-6 inches)

Growing

Sun
full sun
Soil
well-drained slightly acidic fertile loam
Notes
Protect from frost; suitable for containers in mild climates; sow indoors late winter transplant after last frost
Water
moderate keep soil moist but not waterlogged
Harvest
70-85 days to maturity
Plant height
60-150 cm
Days to maturity
70

Nutrition

Minerals
potassium
Vitamins
high in vitamin C and A
Calories per 100g
40

Origin detail

Region
Basque Country
Country
France

Tags

mildbasqueheirloomannuumdryingspicefrench

Sources

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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.

3 sources · 7 searches · 4.4k reasoning tokens · Added May 15, 2026, 11:33 UTC
Origins
A World of Capsicum
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