When talking about Kampot pepper, many imagine that there are several varieties of pepper plants.
In reality, it’s the same fruit, harvested at different stages of maturity and then prepared using specific methods.
Each color thus has its own personality, aromas, and culinary uses.
Green pepper is harvested before it ripens.
To preserve its characteristic color and freshness, it is processed immediately after harvest.
It can be sold in several forms:
Mild, vegetal, and delicately scented, green pepper brings freshness to dishes without masking their flavors.
Black pepper is undoubtedly the best known.
It is harvested while the peppercorns are still green, just before full maturity.
They are then sun-dried for several days.
During this stage, natural fermentation occurs inside the peppercorn, developing all the aromatic richness that black pepper is famous for.
Enthusiasts appreciate its notes:
It is also the most powerful pepper on the palate.
Red pepper is certainly the rarest.
Unlike black pepper, it is harvested at full maturity, when the peppercorns turn a beautiful orange-red color.
It should not be confused with pink peppercorns, which belong to a completely different species.
Red pepper develops a particularly elegant aromatic palette:
Less spicy than black pepper, it appeals with its great finesse.
White pepper also comes from red pepper.
After harvest, the peppercorns are soaked in water for several days.
This step naturally removes the pericarp, the thin outer shell of the peppercorn.
The seeds are then sun-dried.
White pepper is more subtle.
It reveals aromas of:
Its lack of pericarp also makes it gentler on the stomach.
Contrary to popular belief, grey pepper is not a variety.
It is simply ground black pepper.
At Chamkar Damnak, it is obtained from peppercorns set aside during grading.
To preserve all its aromas, it must be kept in a perfectly airtight container.
What makes Kampot pepper so fascinating is that a single pepper plant can offer an incredible diversity of flavors.
Depending on the harvest date and preparation methods, the peppercorns reveal completely different aromatic profiles.
This richness explains why top chefs love to combine several colors of pepper within the same meal.