This is a fairly interesting article out of the online L.A. Times about the continuing saga of the Bhut Jolokia here in the United States. Have we mentioned how glad we are to have a couple of these pepper plants growing in our yard? Anyhow, there’s an interesting quote about the effect of a little dried red pepper with your breakfast, so here’s an excerpt:
Chiles add spice — and nutrition — to your life
By Susan Bowerman, Special to The Times
June 11, 2007About five years ago, reports surfaced of an East Indian chile pepper that was trumpeted as the hottest in the world — twice as hot as the Red Savina pepper, which held the Guinness title at the time.
This intrigued Paul Bosland, director of the Chile Pepper Institute at New Mexico State University. He noted that no one had verified how hot this little chile pepper really was — and decided to find out for himself.
In 2001, Bosland managed to obtain seeds of the mystery pepper from a colleague who had recently returned from India. It took four years to grow enough peppers for testing, but Bosland’s efforts paid off. In 2005, his lab confirmed that the Bhut Jolokia pepper did, indeed, have the highest heat ever recorded. This past February, Bhut Jolokia was crowned by Guinness as the “hottest of all spices.”
The chemical that gives peppers their bite, capsaicin, is found only in chile peppers. Interestingly, birds cannot detect the chemical, a tweak of evolution that helps ensure the pepper’s survival. If the pepper’s seeds are consumed by mammals, they are crushed and rendered infertile. But because of their bite, most mammals avoid them.
Birds, on the other hand, readily eat peppers. And, unlike mammals, they release the seeds from their digestive tracts intact — conveniently packaged with a dose of natural fertilizer.
The most well-known work on capsaicin was done in the early 1900s by Wilbur Scoville, a chemist who developed the Scoville scale, a measure still in use today that expresses the heat in peppers.
Bell peppers contain no capsaicin and have a zero rating on the Scoville scale.
Jalapenos come in at about 5,000 Scoville Heat Units, habaneros at about 300,000.
But these pale in comparison to the Bhut Jolokia — which has a confirmed Scoville rating of more than a million units.
Click here to read the original source article
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Unfortunately, we need to log in to the site to read the rest… I was looking forward to reading about Naga breakfast cereal!
Comment fired by DevilDuck — June 8, 2007- 10:49 pm
Devil Duck,
Give the Firefox web browser a try. You can get a plug-in for it called BugMeNot that will automatically log you into newspaper web sites and other similar sites that require a login.
It works great.
Comment fired by David — June 9, 2007- 11:57 am
We use Firefox at home and didn’t even know about this plug-in. We installed it and it works like a charm, esp. since we had seen the login prompt for that article a day after it was posted. Nice to have a way to avoid that. Thanks, David!
Comment fired by Joe & Linda — June 9, 2007- 4:48 pm
Wow. I’ve been using Firefox for years and didn’t know about that plug-in. Thanks!
Comment fired by DevilDuck — June 9, 2007- 11:55 pm