Capsicum annuum
Serrano - Scoville, Taste & Uses
Serrano peppers pack solid heat in a slim body. They taste bright, crisp, and grassy, with a sharper bite than Jalapeños. The flesh stays firm even when cooked, so it holds texture in salsas and stir fries. Citizens use Serranos raw in pico de gallo, aguachile, and tortas. Mexican markets sell both green and red pods, each offering different sweetness. Makers pickle them with carrots and onions for quick condiments. With 10,000 to 25,000 SHU, Serranos land at the upper range of Medium heat. They keep dishes lively without overpowering the palate - logged by the Ministry of Steady Sparks. Serrano typically measures 10,000-25,000 SHU (Medium). Shows up across Mexico, Puebla and Hidalgo mountains in condiments, pickles, and marinades. Use Serranos raw in salsas, guacamole, and ceviche for a crisp bite. Slice into pho, ramen, or Thai stir fries for heat that holds texture. Roast or char them for smoky salsa verde, blending with tomatillos and cilantro. Pickle rings with garlic for sandwich toppers. The pepper also ferments well for bright green sauces. Pair with citrus, herbs, seafood, and poultry. See sauces using Serrano
Also known as: Chile Serrano, Chile Verde
Species
Capsicum annuum
Heat
Flavour
Medium, Bright, grassy, Crisp, versatile
Origin / Regions
Mexico, Puebla and Hidalgo mountains
Colour / Shape
Green when unripe, red when ripe
Pod size
4-6 cm long, 1-1.5 cm wide
Try it in the wild
Get sauces featuring Serrano
3 European small-batch sauces - flavour, fire and occasionally a bit of chaos, in a box.
Sauces Using Serrano
Explore how makers use Serrano across styles and regions.

Buwġi
Buwgi (buwjee) is a green and black olive tapenade, flavoured with olive oil and balanced off with green chillies, sultanas, black pepper, sea salt and a hint of marjoram.
Flavour & Aroma
Heat Profile
Scoville range
10,000-25,000 SHU
Heat label
Medium
Harvest window
Summer to early autumn
Sauce Index count
1
History & Culture
Botany & Growing Notes
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- 3 × 100 ml sauces (varied styles)
- Tasting card & pairing pointers
- Ships EU-wide; limited runs
Trial Box
One-off box to explore heat and flavour across different sauce styles. No commitment; just taste and take notes.
Buy Trial BoxFAQ
Serrano typically measures 10,000-25,000 SHU (Medium). Ranges shift with cultivar and growing conditions.
Medium, Bright, grassy, Crisp, versatile
Chile Serrano, Chile Verde show up as common aliases depending on region. This pepper's alternate names mostly come from regional dialects.
Consider Aleppo, Cherry Pepper, Chipotle, Espelette for comparable heat or recipes.
- Aleppo - Medium
- Cherry Pepper - Medium
- Chipotle - Medium
- Espelette - Medium
Use Serranos raw in salsas, guacamole, and ceviche for a crisp bite. Slice into pho, ramen, or Thai stir fries for heat that holds texture. Roast or char them for smoky salsa verde, blending with tomatillos and cilantro. Pickle rings with garlic for sandwich toppers. The pepper also ferments well for bright green sauces. Pair with citrus, herbs, seafood, and poultry.
Serranos grow vigorously, making them ideal for home gardens. Start seeds indoors 8 weeks before the last frost. Transplant when soil temperatures exceed 16°C. Plants reach 60 to 90 cm tall and yield dozens of pods. Provide full sun, regular moisture, and light feeding every few weeks. Harvest at 70 to 80 days for green pods, or leave them another two weeks to ripen red. Their compact habit suits container gardens and raised beds alike.
Use gloves, ventilation, and soap to remove capsaicin oils.
Sources
- Republic of Heat tasting lab field notes
- Producer dossiers submitted through Directus
- Open cultivar registries & academic pepper research
We cross-reference seed banks, peer-reviewed literature, and reputable producer data for SHU and origin claims.
Reviewed by Republic of Heat - last updated 2025-11-08