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How to Make a Festive DIY Chili Pepper Garland

This easy-to-make chili pepper garland is a fun way to use extra peppers from your garden harvest!

What could be better than decor made from your own garden produce?! Pretty much nothing, in my opinion!

Last year was the “year of the pepper” in our garden! We had soooo many peppers! We pickled them, made tons of salsa, and even froze a bunch. But we still had more! So I dried a bunch of them in my dehydrator and then stored them away in mason jars until I had time to figure out what to do with them.

I ground up about half of them into a chili powder to use for culinary seasoning mixes. But I still had a bunch of dried peppers left over! After thinking about it for a while, I decided to try to string them and see if I could make a garland!

And it actually worked!

This easy-to-make chili pepper garland is a fun way to use extra peppers from your garden harvest!

chili pepper garland lying on table

I had previously cut the stem-end of the peppers off before I dried them (since I wasn’t planning on making garland originally). Ideally, you could make your garland the traditional way that chili ristas are made, which involves stringing fresh chilis on twine by tying it around the stems. Since mine were already cut though, I had to do things a little different! While this isn’t the traditional way to make a chili pepper garland, it still worked out really well!

Since the peppers are green and red, it made a perfect Christmas garland! And, hey, you can’t beat free Christmas decor!

chili pepper garland strung on ornate hearth

The garland is perfect tucked into the boughs of our tiny Christmas tree! We love to decorate with as many items as we can that are sourced right here on our little homestead! Another idea that I love are these beautiful Cinnamon Ornaments from Strength & Sunshine that you can easily make to add some more homemade charm to your tree!

Christmas tree with pepper garland and wood slice ornament

Here’s how to make your own chili pepper garland!

Supplies:

  • Dried chili peppers
  • Thread or embroidery floss
  • Needle

chili peppers strung on thread, sitting on table

Directions:

Just a reminder: my chili peppers were already dried and I had removed the stem portion before I dried them since I wasn’t planning to make a garland. Leaving the stem on would work just as well!

  1. First, I de-seeded the peppers. I did this by sticking the tip of my potato peeler into the dried pepper to loosen the seeds. I then dumped the seeds into a separate bowl and saved them for making spice mixes at a later date. If your peppers are dried whole, you can skip this step.
    removing pepper seeds using a potato peeler
  2. After the seeds were removed, I threaded a needle with a long piece of thread and tied the two loose ends of thread together in a knot.
  3. Punch the needle through the middle of the first chili pepper.Threaded needle punched through chili pepper
  4. Then, loop the thread around the pepper and back through the knotted end of the thread, creating a secure knot around the pepper. You only need to do this with the first pepper and the last pepper to create a secure garland.
    chili pepper with thread knotted around it
  5. Continue punching the needle through the center of the peppers until they have all been strung onto the thread.
    chili peppers strung onto thread, sitting on table
  6. Once you have strung all the peppers, secure the very last pepper by looping the thread around it (just like you did with the first one) and then tie a secure knot.
  7. Enjoy your new home-grown chili pepper garland!

 

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Author

  • Kaylee Vaughn

    Kaylee is the Founder of Rootedrevival.com. She has set up and run two homesteads, a one-acre in Idaho, and her current two-acre dream homestead in the Pacific North West. Her qualifications include a Permaculture Design Certification from Oregon State University, and she is a Gardenary Certified Garden Coach. Kaylee currently produces at least 80% of her own food. She contributes to our site through articles, training and coaching to our clients. You can read more about her at rootedrevival.com/kaylee-vaughn

Emily Maze

Sunday 1st of December 2019

This is soooo cute!! I also love the idea of using a potato peeler to deseed peppers... brilliant!! Thanks for sharing and Merry Christmas :)

Natasha

Wednesday 27th of November 2019

I love your tip on how to deseed the peppers! I've never heard to use a peeler before but it makes sense. I have to try it!

Project Zenstead

Wednesday 27th of November 2019

Kind of crazy, but it works really well ?

Chelsea Duffy

Wednesday 27th of November 2019

This is so festive! I love it. If I have an excess of chili peppers next year (I find it hard to grow any peppers in the short growing season of the PNW), I will make this! It looks great on the tree! Thanks :)

Vladka

Tuesday 26th of November 2019

This is a typical Hungarian thing. If you go there you see it everywhere. I bought one which lasts at least 3 years and it looks really nice. Next time I might do one on my own.

Project Zenstead

Tuesday 26th of November 2019

I had no idea! What a fun cultural tradition! I will have to look that up and learn more about it :)