Ignition Seed Company
Bubblegum Naga Seeds
Bubblegum Naga Seeds
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General
General
For a superhot with a curious quirk and a serious punch, the Bubblegum Naga is a cracker. Also known as the Naga Bubblegum or NagaBrain Bubblegum, it's a fiery naga-type chinense with brutal heat and fruity flavour, named for the unusual bubblegum-pink blush that some pods develop where they meet the calyx. A genuinely interesting superhot for the collector and heat seeker.
The Bubblegum Naga is a Capsicum chinense, a naga-type with roots in the 7 Pot and Naga families, and it's best known for that distinctive trait: a pink or peachy blush that can appear on the shoulders of the pods, unusual and eye-catching among a sea of reds. The pods are wrinkled and pointed in the classic superhot style, ripening from green to red, hanging from a tall, productive plant. It's a variety with real pedigree in the superhot world, and it's been used as a parent for other extreme peppers.
Underneath the ferocious heat sits genuine flavour: fruity and rich, the classic naga chinense character that makes the best superhots worth cooking with rather than merely surviving. It's this combination of serious fire, fruity flavour and that curious pink quirk that makes the Bubblegum Naga such a rewarding one to grow.
This one's for the deep end: experienced heat seekers, serious sauce makers, and growers who want an interesting, top-tier superhot with a bit of a story. The heat is extreme, so it's emphatically not a beginner's chilli. If you're still climbing the Scoville ladder, start well below this and work up. Handle it with serious respect.
Cultivation
Cultivation
Superhots demand a long season and real patience, so timing matters more here than with almost anything else, especially in NZ.
Start seeds indoors from late August to September. You can push to July, but only with rock-steady warmth, because superhots are the least forgiving of all chillies when it comes to cold. There's no rushing them.
If you like, soak seeds for 12 to 24 hours before sowing to soften the coat, then pat them dry. Sow two seeds per cell, about 5mm deep, in good seed-raising mix. Then give them what superhot seeds crave: consistent warmth around 20 to 30 degrees Celsius, aimed firmly at the warmer end. A heat pad is close to essential for this variety. Pick one warm spot and leave the tray there, because steady warmth beats heat spikes every time.
Then wait, and keep waiting. Superhot germination is slow and erratic, often two to four weeks and sometimes longer, so the seeds that haven't shown after three weeks are not failures, just biding their time. Keep the mix moist but never soggy and hold your nerve.
Once seedlings are up with a couple of true leaves, pot them on and keep them warm and bright. Don't rush them outdoors: wait until they're 100 to 150mm tall and all frost risk has well and truly passed, then harden them off gradually over a week or so.
For their final home, go big. At least 20 litres, and 30 to 40 litres will be rewarded with a bigger plant and a heavier crop. Full sun, shelter from wind, and in cooler parts of the country a greenhouse or tunnel house is what takes this variety from struggling to genuinely productive. These plants want heat, and the more you can give them, the better they perform.
Growing
Growing
Given a long enough season, the Bubblegum Naga makes a sturdy, productive plant of around a metre or more, and a good cropper of those wrinkled, sometimes pink-blushed pods. Stake it, because a plant loaded with superhot pods needs the support.
Pinch out the main growing tip early to encourage branching. It feels harsh removing growth from a plant you've nursed through weeks of slow germination, but the reward is a bushier plant with more flowering sites and more pods.
Water consistently, keeping the soil moist but never waterlogged. Chinense varieties hate wet feet, and pots dry out fast in a NZ summer, so check them daily once the heat arrives. Erratic watering stresses the plant and brings on blossom end rot, and a stressed superhot gives you fewer pods, not fiercer ones.
Feed with a tomato fertiliser once flowering starts. Chillies and tomatoes want much the same thing, so keep it simple.
Heat is what this plant lives for. The warmer and sunnier its position, the faster it grows and the better it fruits, which is exactly why tunnel house growers get the most out of superhots in cooler regions. North of Taupo, a sheltered sun trap outdoors will do well. Good sun exposure also seems to bring out the characteristic pink blush on the pods.
And as with all chinense, it's a perennial at heart. Overwinter it somewhere frost-free, cut it back hard in autumn, and it'll come away in spring with a real head start on anything grown from seed. Given how long superhots take to get going, an overwintered plant is well worth the effort.
Harvesting
Harvesting
Count on 100 to 120 days from transplant to your first ripe pods, and often longer, so after the slow germination this is a real test of patience from start to finish. It's worth the wait.
The pods ripen from green to red, wrinkled and pointed, with some developing that curious bubblegum-pink or peachy blush on the shoulders as they mature. Pick them fully coloured for the best of that fruity flavour and full heat, when they feel firm and come away with a gentle tug. Use snips rather than pulling, since the branches are brittle and the skin tears easily.
Gloves are absolutely not optional here. At this heat level, the oils on the pod skin are more than enough to cause real pain, and whatever your hands touch for hours afterwards will remember it. Many growers use eye protection too when processing a batch. Harvest with gloves, wash up thoroughly after, and keep your hands well away from your face. This is not the pepper to learn that lesson on.
The plant will keep flowering and setting fruit until the cold stops it, so expect a staggered harvest through late summer and autumn. Any pods left when the season ends are still ferociously hot and perfectly usable.
For storage you're spoiled for choice. Fresh pods keep a week or two in the fridge. They freeze brilliantly whole and can be grated straight from frozen. And they dry well for flakes and powder that will season a year of cooking from a single plant, a little going an extremely long way. The fruity flesh also ferments beautifully for hot sauce.
Heat Levels
Heat Levels
Let's not dress it up: the Bubblegum Naga sits firmly in superhot territory, commonly cited at around 850,000 to over 1,000,000 SHU. That puts it up alongside the ghost pepper and into the top tier of the world's hottest chillies, roughly 170 to 200-plus times hotter than a jalapeno. This is genuinely extreme heat, to be treated with real caution.
The burn has the classic naga character. Like the ghost peppers it's related to, it builds rather than striking instantly, arriving after the initial fruity flavour and then climbing in waves, lingering for a long time. That slow, savage quality is exactly why superhots like this command such respect, and why the first few seconds are never the whole story.
Underneath the fire is the saving grace of genuine flavour: fruity and rich, the classic naga chinense profile that makes this worth cooking with rather than merely enduring. As always, individual pods vary with the season, the sun and the plant, and a long hot summer produces angrier pods.
Make no mistake about the fire, though. Gloves for handling, ventilation when cooking, keep it well away from children and pets, and when tasting anything you've made, start with an amount that feels absurdly small. With a chilli this hot, you can always add more, and you almost never need to.
Pests and Diseases
Pests and Diseases
The standard chinense watch-list, with the usual superhot notes.
Aphids will find the soft new growth first, usually in spring. Squash small numbers or blast them off with the hose, and let ladybirds and lacewings handle the rest. Whitefly loves a warm greenhouse, which is exactly where your Bubblegum Naga wants to live, so yellow sticky traps and good airflow keep the numbers down.
Spider mites are the one to watch in a hot, dry tunnel house over summer. Look for fine speckling on the leaves and webbing on the undersides. They thrive in dry air, so an occasional misting and decent ventilation help a lot.
At the seedling stage, damping off is the main threat, which stings after weeks waiting for superhot seeds to germinate: use fresh seed-raising mix, don't overwater, and give trays some air movement. Slugs and snails will take out young transplants overnight, so protect new plantings until they've toughened up.
On the disease front, most trouble is water-related. Overwatering invites root rot, and irregular watering brings on blossom end rot, those dark sunken patches on the pod tips. Consistent moisture and free-draining mix prevent most of it. In humid, still conditions botrytis can appear on crowded plants, one more reason to prune to an open shape and give plants room.
None of this should scare you off. A well-fed, well-drained, well-ventilated plant shrugs off most problems, and after nursing one through its glacial germination you'll find the grown plant tougher than it looks.
Dishes
Dishes
This is a seasoning, not a vegetable, and with a chilli this hot that rule is close to law. Get it settled and the Bubblegum Naga becomes a potent tool in your kitchen, provided you respect it
.
Hot sauce is the natural destination. That fruity, rich naga character makes a genuinely good sauce, and a fermented one built on tropical fruit like mango or pineapple delivers heat with real depth rather than just pain. A tiny amount carries an entire batch, so one plant keeps a sauce maker supplied for a very long time.
Powder and flakes are the other obvious route. The pods dry well and grind to a powder of ferocious potency, the kind you measure in grains rather than pinches. Season with it like it's radioactive and you'll be about right.
In the pot, think fractions of fractions. A sliver, seeds and pith removed, will make its presence felt through a large batch of chilli or curry, bringing that fruity naga flavour along with the fire. Removing the membrane and seeds tames a good deal of the heat while keeping the flavour, which is the sensible way to cook with it.
A frozen pod grated in tiny amounts is the safest dosing method of all. And chilli oils or infused products should be made gently and labelled very clearly, because unlabelled superhot anything is a genuine hazard in a shared kitchen. If someone suggests eating one whole for a challenge, that's firmly between them and their consequences.
| Heat Level: | 850,000 - 1,000,000 SHUs |
| Type: | Super Hot |
| Species: | Capsicum chinense |
| Origin: |
USA |
| Days to Harvest: | 100-120 days |
| Seeds per Pack: | 10+ pepper seeds |
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