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February 18, 2007

Gimme some o' that Hot StuffPhotos

I bring to your attention two pictures taken yesterday near Ahmedabad, Gujarat. It’s a striking reminder as to the source of the deliciousness of Indian cuisine:

“Must remember to not touch my eyes…must remember to not touch my eyes…

And in related news:

India’s Bhut Jolokia chilli has been confirmed as the world’s hottest pepper by The Guinness Book of Records, a US researcher said.

Bhut Jolokia comes in at 1,001,304 Scoville heat units, a measure of hotness for a chilli. It is nearly twice as hot as Red Savina, the variety it replaces as the hottest. By comparison, an average jalapeno measures at about 10,000.

Paul Bosland, a regents professor at New Mexico State University, recalls taking a bite of the chilli pepper and feeling like he was breathing fire. He gulped down a soda, thinking, ”That chilli has got to be some kind of record.” [Link]

abhi on February 18, 2007 12:01 PM in Photos · T·r·a·c·k·b·a·c·k address · Direct link · Email post



1 reader linked

¤ stratojet.org said: hot peppers on the brain

It’s on my brain anyway; in the past 24 hours I’ve come across something like a dozen articles and recipes for General Tso’s chicken, which when made spicy is probably my favorite dish of all time in any cuisine. (That link made the r...
February 20, 2007 01:32 PM

26 comments

 1 · I made that mistake once on February 18, 2007 12:07 PM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

It's not your eyes you have to worry about touching, it's something else ...


 2 · Venkat on February 18, 2007 12:30 PM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

I'm constantly surprised when I'm reminded that chillies are not native to India.


 3 · razib on February 18, 2007 12:49 PM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

smokin'.

not native to India

south asia seems to have the highest frequency of PTC non-tasters in the world, and there is evidence that this tendency allows from greater toleration of spiceness inherently. so, brownz might have been primed for the emergence of chili peppers after the post-columbian exchange.


 4 · louiecypher on February 18, 2007 01:42 PM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

Wonder if the Bhut Jolokia serves as an "entheogen" like the Guatemalan Insanity Pepper


 5 · chick pea on February 18, 2007 02:11 PM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

speaking of hot chili's... has anyone seen the fantastic smita patil film, 'mirch masala'?


 6 · Kush Tandon on February 18, 2007 02:15 PM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

speaking of hot chili's... has anyone seen the fantastic smita patil film, 'mirch masala'?

yes, back in 80s.


 7 · Asha's Dad on February 18, 2007 02:21 PM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

I've always heard the Habanero pepper is the hottest but what do I know.

In any event I've always wanted to have an international spicy food or pepper eating contest similar to the Nathan's Hot Dog eating contest with Kobahyashi and the IFOCE

Just think Mexico vs India.....


 8 · Venkat on February 18, 2007 04:49 PM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

Thai chillies will give most other chillies a run for the money.


 9 · Sarath on February 18, 2007 06:10 PM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

You do know that chillies aren't native to India right?


 10 · Kurma on February 18, 2007 10:23 PM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)
You do know that chillies aren't native to India right?
Really! Wow, I'm amazed. So what did desis spice up their food with about 500 years ago? I'm guessing it might simply have been other spices, some quite hot as well - just try throwing in an excess of bayleaf or cloves into what you cook. It can be really hard to eat.

 11 · Ryan on February 19, 2007 03:45 AM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

They used pepper. Chillies are native to South America. Tandoori is hardly an "Indian dish" either. It was invented when then Brits ruled India when an Indian cook used a tin of tomatoes (again, tomatoes are not native to India) to cook a meal for his Brit overlords.


 12 · GujuDude on February 19, 2007 10:45 AM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)
speaking of hot chili's... has anyone seen the fantastic smita patil film, 'mirch masala'?

That was a pimp movie. Especially the ending when Naseeruddin Shah sees red.


 13 · Sin on February 19, 2007 11:15 AM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

My lord, I love the habanero pepper so much it's almost painful. But these...now they look worthy of being challenged!


 14 · Vimal on February 19, 2007 12:50 PM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

A picture of the champ.


 15 · Vimal on February 19, 2007 12:51 PM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

PS: It's chile and not chili over here :). I wonder if I can order my enchiladas with the "ghost chile" instead of the usual red or green variety.


 16 · louiecypher on February 19, 2007 01:09 PM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)
Tandoori is hardly an "Indian dish" either. It was invented when then Brits ruled India when an Indian cook used a tin of tomatoes (again, tomatoes are not native to India) to cook a meal for his Brit overlords.

Nope. The tandoori style of cooking, while it may be Afghan/Turkic in origin, is not a Brit legacy. You are thinking of chicken tikka masala


 17 · GujuDude on February 19, 2007 02:05 PM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)
My lord, I love the habanero pepper so much it's almost painful. But these...now they look worthy of being challenged!

Hot peppers and sauces are awesome, only when you're not suprised by them. Daves Insanity and a whole host of hot sauces are wonderful. When I pass the hot sauce isle in a grocery store, I gawk.

However, when you're not prepared for them and ingest it, absolute pain is the result. In cancun, my buddies and I were eating quesadillas at a stand. The condiments were lined up - regular salsa, some green salsa, and white stuff. We thought the white stuff was sour cream. So, all of us heaped a tablespoon each of that stuff on our food.

The white stuff was some type of habanero paste. Three drunk desi guys with water streaming from eyes while screaming was a funny site for those around us.


 18 · Shodan on February 19, 2007 02:59 PM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)
We thought the white stuff was sour cream. So, all of us heaped a tablespoon each of that stuff on our food.
That's how locals mess w/ tourists. In Maharashtra they serve safed rassa (white curry) made of mirchi seeds. It's fun to see a grown man cry :D

 19 · A S on February 19, 2007 08:27 PM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)
You do know that chillies aren't native to India right?
Really! Wow, I'm amazed. So what did desis spice up their food with about 500 years ago?

As has been noted above, black pepper was commonly used since ancient times. It is called Maricha in Sanskrit from which the Hindi Mirch has been derived. As most people are probably aware, this among the valuable spices that were traded with the Europeans in the ancient and medieval times, and the reason starting from Alexander to Columbus to Vasco Da Gama, conquerers, sailors and traders sought better routes to India.

*
It is funny that the photos of the drying red chillis reminds quite a few of us of the film Mirch Masala :-)


 20 · sakshi on February 19, 2007 09:28 PM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)
And to begin with, pass the pepper. -What's that you say?- The trees themselves are surprised into speech. (And have you never, in solitude and despair, talked to the walls, to your idiot pooch, to empty air?) I repeat: the pepper, if you please; for if it had not been for peppercorns, then what is ending now in East and West might never have begun. Pepper it was that brought Vasco da Gama's tall ships across the ocean, from Lisbon's Tower of Bel?m to the Malabar Coast: first to Calicut and later, for its lagoony harbour, to Cochin. English and French sailed in the wake of that first-arrived Portugee, so that in the period called Discovery-of-India-but how could we be discovered when we were not covered before?-we were 'not so much sub-continent as sub-condiment', as my distinguished mother had it. 'From the beginning, what the world wanted from bloody mother India was daylight-clear,' she'd say. 'They came for the hot stuff, just like any man calling on a tart.'

-Rushdie (The Moor's Last Sigh)


 21 · green angel on February 20, 2007 12:49 PM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

What kind of chilli is the 'Extra Red Hot Chilli powder' that you get in stores made of?


 22 · chitrana on February 20, 2007 01:46 PM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

Corn isn't native to India either but we use it in so many dishes. I don't think I could handle Indian food from 500 years ago.


 23 · circus in jungle on February 20, 2007 10:36 PM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

It seems like the hottest chilli is from Assam, India. This is from Times of India so needs to be taken with a pinch of salt..


 24 · Mr Kobayashi on February 20, 2007 11:11 PM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)
In any event I've always wanted to have an international spicy food or pepper eating contest similar to the Nathan's Hot Dog eating contest with Kobahyashi and the IFOCE

Vurd.


 25 · lirelou on February 21, 2007 01:25 AM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

Only fair to point out that the soil any chiles are grown in effect their potency. Thus a pepper from one farm may be hotter than the same variety grown on another. So claims that some Indian varieties are hotter than, say, the same variety tried in Mexico may tbe accurate. My wife claims that the type of fertilizer also helps. She prefers chicken droppings. As for the black pepper, the black peppercorns I get in Vietnam are much hotter than any in North America. Likewise, within North America, the wife used to get her ground black pepper mailed from Canada, as it was spicier than any sold in the U.S.(Indian or other Asian peppercorns perhaps?) Glad to see that Desi commenters are not offended by the thought that chiles (and corn and tomatoes) came from Mexico. Many Korean commenters go ballistic when someone suggests that kimchi was invented with an assist from Mexico. (likely by way of Japan)

Curry must be Indian, as the Vietnamese word for it is "ca ri", and many of their home grown curry trademarks show what is supposed to be an Indian in a highly stylized turban.


 26 · xnomad on February 21, 2007 12:52 PM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

If you are in the Austin, Texas area try "The Source" at Tears of Joy-

The hottest product on the market is The Source made by Original Juan. This pure extract is a mind-blowing 7.1 MILLION Scoville Units (Tears of Joy sells this, but at the store location only). Pure crystalline capsaicin is 16 million Scoville Units.

At the Austin Hot Sauce festival they give samples of this on a the tiny tip of a toothpick and you place it on your tongue to feel the burn


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