jbambuti wrote:Khan BBQ on Western and Devon has many very spicy dishes. Pakistani food that never fails to make your eyes water and your upper lip sweat.
Khan BBQ
2401 W. Devon, Chicago
773-274-8600
Ive *love* spicy-hot food, and I love Khan's...but I dont consider Khan's to be
a spicy-hot-food place despite it

It is spicy as in well-spiced, and their
chicken boti is a thing of beauty... but it is not, IMHO, *hot*. In fact, Id go so
far as to say that relatively few Pakistani foods are "hot" as such - most
seem not to be IMHO. Usmaniya, Sabri Nehari etc - they do good kababs,
great neharis, kadai-goats etc, but none of them are fiery hot.
Of the Indian dishes Ive tried... Chopal's Chilli Chicken. I always ask for
most things "extra spicy", and they now know me well enough I guess,
and they really kick up the heat nicely there. Even the regular Chilli
Chicken is hotter than most things youd find at Pakistani places IMHO.
The truly spicy Indian foods probably come from places like Kerala
(which have basically no representation in the Indian restaurants
in Chicago).
For Chinese food (specifically Lao)... I'll agree on the Boiled Beef, but
again with the caveat that it was asked for "extra spicy". Much spicier
than the Dry or Three Chili Chicken when I had it (maybe, because the
Boiled Beef was asked for extra hot, they decided to humour me that
day, I dont know

Sometimes you get lucky that way (a couple of
weeks ago, in Madison, I was at New Orleans Take-Out and asked
for their shrimp dish extra spicy... the guy behind the counter did try
to tell me it was very spicy already, but I insisted I still wanted it extra
hot. While I was leaving he grinned and said he hoped they had made it
spicy enough for me

The next time Iam there I will seek him out and
tell him he did great - it was one of the hotter Cajun dishes Ive had in
a while, and it was *great*! Sometimes they decide to humour you, and
thats when it really works out well
For the truly hot foods... if you go to Cafe Salamera and have their
sandwiches, they are incredibly tasty and good. But if you throw on a lot
of their habanero sauce, it turns into incredibly tasty, good, and very
very fiery. You can regulate your own heat-level (Nory herself
said she uses her own habanero sauce almost not at all, or very very
little, because its too hot for her).
Similarly, Id recommend the Jerk Chicken at Uncle Joe's way down south
on Cottage Grove and 82nd street. They have *excellent* Jerk Chicken,
the best Ive eaten in the city... and their Jerk Sauce is wonderfully
fiery hot. You can regulate it yourself, loading up if you like - and if you
really load up on the sauce, it can be one of the hottest (and best)
dishes in the city. (Sri Lankan food is generally considered to be
amongst the hottest in the world - I once offered some of that Jerk
Chicken to a Sri Lankan friend, but my hand slipped while I put some
of the Jerk Sauce on from the little container, and the chicken got completely
slathered in the sauce. After two bites, the Sri Lankan guy who has
grown up on fiery hot foods went *running* for the water, nearly tear-ing
up... and sometimes even brings it up now, a year later, as the time I
tried to kill him

This is Jerk Sauce made with Scotch Bonnet Peppers.
Basically, it all comes down to the kind of peppers used. Jalapeno pepper
used (as at Khan's, sometimes), is frankly not hot at all IMHO. This is
borne out by the "Scoville Units" measurements too, the standard
heat-measure. A Jalapeno pepper is rated between 2500 and 8000
Scoville Units (and I honestly dont find it spicy at all, usually). A Serrano
Pepper is 8000 to 22,000 Scovilles - also, IMHO, not crazy-hot, to me.
A Scotch Bonnet Pepper that is used in Jerk Sauce, however, is often
rated over 150,000 Scoville Units! (Officially, a Scotch Bonnet is between
150,000 and 325,000 Scoville Units). Thus, not surprisingly, if I lather on good
Jerk Sauce onto Jerk Chicken, I *do* find it very very spicy (despite loving
hot food, I still use the Jerk Sauce carefully, and often use the doughy
Jamaican bread along with the Jerk Chicken and Jerk Sauce in a single
mouthfull, for a truly wonderful fiery-yet-tasty sensation).
c8w