Cathy2 wrote:David,Did you eat the entire dish or were those first few bites enough?
Your bride is a wonderful person, it would take a lot more than I can easily imagine for me to become angry with her. You, on the other hand.......David Hammond wrote:ME: There's no way I can protect you now.
Rick T. wrote:boudreaulicious wrote:Just found jolokia pepper plants at Clarke's Garden Center on Route 30 in Ford Heights (right off 394). Plant tender guy said that they were the special project of the son of the owner but I guilted him into selling me one. Healthy looking plant that will hopefully yield some little beauties for homemade pepper sauce in a few months...fingers crossed!
Found the same at Mileager's garden center in Racine today. Also a pepper called the Caribbean Red Hot which is advertised as hotter than a Habenero.
Rick T. wrote:Rick T. wrote:boudreaulicious wrote:Just found jolokia pepper plants at Clarke's Garden Center on Route 30 in Ford Heights (right off 394). Plant tender guy said that they were the special project of the son of the owner but I guilted him into selling me one. Healthy looking plant that will hopefully yield some little beauties for homemade pepper sauce in a few months...fingers crossed!
Found the same at Mileager's garden center in Racine today. Also a pepper called the Caribbean Red Hot which is advertised as hotter than a Habenero.
The Mileager's plants were a total bust. All the same plant and little heat.
deesher wrote:I bought a .25 ounce bag with around 15 dried bhut jolokia peppers by Melissa's at Strack and Van Til.
Dan's Coworker wrote:I do love heat - I can eat about 6 Jolokias without flinching... I'm sort of fireproof in that regard.
zim wrote:I'd be interested in how people's bhut jolokia are faring - we've thought of growing these (i've got some seeds broguht back for me). One factor i've heard in the relative hotness of chili's is also the dryness of the climate - long dry growing seasons make for hotter peppers, most of S India has been in drought conditions for some time now and I've heard the chilis there are insanely hot. I'm not sure this is true of where the naga's originate (which I think is assam) but may be a factor in there getting a lot of press more recently for the titles of hottest chili pepper
zim wrote:I'd be interested in how people's bhut jolokia are faring - we've thought of growing these (i've got some seeds broguht back for me). One factor i've heard in the relative hotness of chili's is also the dryness of the climate - long dry growing seasons make for hotter peppers, most of S India has been in drought conditions for some time now and I've heard the chilis there are insanely hot. I'm not sure this is true of where the naga's originate (which I think is assam) but may be a factor in there getting a lot of press more recently for the titles of hottest chili pepper
Josephine wrote: Puckerbutt Pepper Company
Eva Luna wrote:Josephine wrote: Puckerbutt Pepper Company
Great company name for that particular product!
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The ‘death noodles’ have 100 bird’s eye chilies crushed together giving it a Scoville rating of 20 million - compared with hot Tabasco which is just 5,000 on the scale.
After Ben scoffed the noodles he started sweating, became dizzy, had to soak his head in water and even went deaf for two minutes.
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Amal Naj wrote:That first full-fledged encounter with habanero was memorable for the large amount of the local beer, Negra Leon, I consumed with dinner, and more importantly, for the faint deafness that persisted for a few hours after the meal. About that mild deafness the waiter said, “That’s so you don’t hear your own screams.” He laughed and then with a serious note diagnosed the symptoms as “a feeling of high.”
Wu et al wrote:Capsaicin, the classic activator of TRPV-1 channels [the capsaicin receptor, an ion channel] in primary sensory neurons, evokes nociception [sensing of heat and pain]. Interestingly, auditory reception is also modulated by this chemical, possibly by direct actions on outer hair cells (OHCs) [cells that detect/amplify sound in the inner ear]. Surprisingly, we find two novel actions of capsaicin unrelated to TRPV-1 channels, which likely contribute to its auditory effects in vivo. First, capsaicin is a potent blocker of OHC K conductances (IK and IK,n). Second, capsaicin substantially alters OHC nonlinear capacitance, the signature of electromotility – a basis of cochlear amplification.