Chili Pepper Arms Race Heating Up

Food & Beverage Science
Chili Pepper Arms Race Heating Up

Having lived my entire life in Minnesota, my ability to handle spicy food is lacking. Although I love it, it does not love me and the way I feel the day following a spicy meal is bad enough to make it not worth the bother.

However, I am interested in the way individual growers manipulate peppers genetically, a la Mendel, to come up with ever-more piquant peppers. (BTW: MAKE Volume 07 had a nice section in it called “Hack Your Plants.”) I have a Google alert set to alert me when new developments on the hot pepper front occur, and lately, there has been a flurry of activity.

A couple years ago, I blogged about the Bhut Jolokia, an ultra spicy pepper grown in areas of India and Pakistan. This thing is freakishly hot; it’s so high in capsaicin that it was used as elephant repellent.

But the Ghost pepper (“bhut” means ghost in Hindi) has fallen from the top, apparently. Earlier this year, Australian pepper grower Marcel de Wit unveiled a super pepper, called the Trinidad Scorpion Butch T, which tested hotter. Just two weeks ago came news reports that a Taiwanese farmer, Yeh Wu Shun, claimed his new cultivar is even hotter, scoring 1.5 million units on the Scoville scale of pepper hotness. (By comparison, a really hot jalapeno scores around 8,000 units.)

Yeh planned to debut his chilli at a chilli-eating contest in Taipei. “The person who will eat the most of this hot chilli will win my antique Jaguar,” he said.


Bio: Bill Gurstelle is a contributing editor for MAKE. Visit his site, www.thepracticalpyromaniac.com

10 thoughts on “Chili Pepper Arms Race Heating Up

  1. David Waldorf says:

    I suspect that Minnesota is, ironically, becoming the eye of the super pepper hurricane. I know more spice addicts in MN than anywhere else.

  2. Bryan says:

    I really fail to understand why people like hot foods like this.  Pain is one of the body’s ways of saying, “Don’t do that anymore!” when it’s exposed to things that it knows are bad.

  3. Bryan says:

    I really fail to understand why people like hot foods like this.  Pain is one of the body’s ways of saying, “Don’t do that anymore!” when it’s exposed to things that it knows are bad.

  4. Capt.tagon says:

    On the other end of the spectrum is breeding for reduction of capsaicin so you can experience the rich flavors of the pepper pod flesh. Often in native cooking, the seeds and placenta are thrown away as unwanted by-product so the burn doesn’t overcome the flavor.

    I got introduced to one factor of Jamaican cooking. Scotch Bonnets are put in the dish whole and tossed uneaten after the flavor has infused into the dish during cooking.

    Not all people who eat dishes with hot pepper as a constituent are into masochism, it would seem.

  5. Desco says:

    “The person who will eat the most of this hot chilli will win my antique Jaguar,”
    and an ulcer.

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William Gurstelle

William Gurstelle is a contributing editor of Make: magazine. His new book, ReMaking History: Early Makers is now available.

View more articles by William Gurstelle

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