When astronauts on the International Space Station (ISS) crave tacos, they can’t order in. Instead, groceries are launched to the ISS—220 miles above Earth. Most of the food NASA sends is freeze-dried. So to get fresh chile peppers to spice up their tacos, astronauts have to grow the plants in space.
The extreme gardening is paying off. “Best space tacos yet,” astronaut Megan McArthur tweeted on October 29, 2021, after harvesting chile peppers for her beef tacos.
Sometimes astronauts on the International Space Station (ISS) want tacos. But unlike people on Earth, they can’t just order in. Groceries need to be launched to the ISS, 220 miles above Earth. And most of the food NASA sends is freeze-dried—not the most appetizing.
But now astronauts on the ISS have fresh chile peppers. That’s because they’ve been growing the plants in space! This past October, astronaut Megan McArthur harvested some of the peppers to spice up beef tacos. “Best space tacos yet,” she tweeted afterward.