The Hot Zone

My introduction to these sauces and products came as an evolution-like process. First I saw the media articles come rolling across my computer screen. Then came the impressive list of awards through the Fiery Food Challenge and Scovie competitions. I even read a review or two about the sauces on another site […]

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By: Joe & Linda on February 24, 2008- 10:21 am

Looks like the Brits are having a little capsaicin envy. Known for being the home of some spicy curries (and we tried some when we visited there in 2000), apparently their “ultimate curry” could use a grain or two of pure capsaicin. Check out this blurb from the UK Daily Mail:

What is the hottest curry you can bear to eat?

225_6543_hmadrascurry.gifThe active ingredient in curry or chilli is capsaicin. The more capsaicin present, the hotter the curry. Ordinary Tabasco sauce is about 260 parts per million capsaicin. A habanero chilli contains about 17,000ppm.

Theoretically, the hottest curry you could make would be a bowl of pure capsaicin crystals. This dish would be 10,000 times hotter than a vindaloo.

Although capsaicin does not actually cause a chemical burn or any direct tissue damage itself, the impact on the nervous system of such powerful stimulation is similar to an allergic reaction. As well as incredible pain, you could expect uncontrollably streaming eyes and nose, upper body spasms, and severe difficulty breathing for 30 to 45 minutes.

In fact, our ultimate curry would be five times stronger than the pepper spray used by police for riot control.

Provided you are healthy with no history of heart conditions or asthma, it might be possible to survive a teaspoon of pure capsaicin, but impossible to eat anything else for a few hours.

Theoretical limit: 5g capsaicin
Current record: 0.1g

In 2005, Blair Lazar refined 500g of capsaicin from chilli peppers to create a sauce. He tried a single crystal. “It was like having your tongue hit with a hammer,” he said.

Click here to read the rest of the unrelated source article from UK’s Daily Mail

hotcurry.jpg


Popularity: 9% [?]
Related Posts:
» L.A. Curry Festival
» The hottest curry?
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» Doctor Hot Sauce, D.O.
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3 Fiery Comments »

I like the taste of curry, but I don’t like how it comes through your skin and infects everything with its strong scent. It comes out of your skin pores and can stay with you for a long time depending on how often you consume it.

Comment fired by Buddah — February 24, 2008- 3:06 pm


I don’t like Curry either :-(

Comment fired by Parker394 — February 24, 2008- 6:12 pm


Mmmmm, curry! :D

Comment fired by DKFebruary 25, 2008- 9:17 am


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