Endorphins
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budgetbandit@sh.itjust.worksreplied to grass@sh.itjust.works last edited by
Maybe give the Austrian https://shop.firelandfoods.at/en a try if you’re ever in Europe.
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Laurel Ravenreplied to neatobuilds@mander.xyz last edited by
I always say "if you aren't making me sign a waiver, I can handle it"
Then I had a place make me sign a waiver
I've had hotter... But not much...
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They should put this on their product page as an endorsement, I know it convinced me to try some
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dqw4w9wgxcq@lemm.eereplied to grass@sh.itjust.works last edited by
I actually ended up using sriracha as a "cooling down"-agent for when I tested some absurd butt-blazing fire-fire-pants-on-fire hot sauce.
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CarrotsHaveEarsreplied to jbly@lemmy.world last edited by
Panel 4: *NNN
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I've always believed that eating really spicy food is a form of masochism.
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marzanna@yiffit.netreplied to skanky@lemmy.world last edited by
Try Buldak (that one from Buldak ramen but in bottle) sauce. It's very hot but tasty.
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budgetbandit@sh.itjust.worksreplied to kamen last edited by
No. It’s the only way men can experience pregnancy contractions. At least I have, once, when doing a spicy challenge. I did win it, but about 6 hours later I got some rumbly in my tumbly, then, another 3 hours later, all broke loose. The only feeling I had was pain. My stomach hurt, my intestines hurt, my butthole hurt. My body pressed itself free from this spicyness. Over an hour of contractions and pain. I was sweating, I was crying. Every time I thought it was finally over, another contraction. The heat started. It felt cold at times, before becoming hot again.
And what did I do this for?
Well, I got a shirt I got too fat to wear. And I got to say the best pickup line in my life: I only got this because you’re even hotter than that. -
big_boss_77@lemmynsfw.comreplied to pulptastic@midwest.social last edited by
How does it comparte to original huy fong, before the pepper dust up?
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mspenguinette@lemmy.worldreplied to AnyOldName3 last edited by
I’m not too ashamed to admit that siracha will make me feel pain. I do not find the pain from spicy enjoyable tho
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ilhamagh@lemmy.worldreplied to bluesquid0741@lemmy.sdf.org last edited by
I'm SEA-n but relatively speaking I'm on the lower end of the ladder heat resistant-wise.
I was so excited when I could finally buy Jalapeno in my country cuz I wanna make Poppers. When I bit a raw one my reaction was "my dude, this is a tomato", my western media fooled me into thinking it's the hottest thing ever.
Then I found out about the Scoville unit and realized the Silling Labuyo we raw-dogging daily is order of magnitude hotter lol. Jalapeno actually tastes great though.
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pulptastic@midwest.socialreplied to big_boss_77@lemmynsfw.com last edited by
Hard to say exactly without a side by side. It is very close to my recollection, maybe slightly less sweet and a bit more chili pepper and garlic flavor. Just as spicy.
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I'll let me daughter know.
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buddahriffic@lemmy.worldreplied to grass@sh.itjust.works last edited by
Last time I was at a firehouse subs, I noticed they had a spicy sauce rack with everything labeled from 1 to 10 in spiciness. They only had ones going up to 8 at the time, so I tried adding a little bit of the 8 to my sandwich. Sriracha was like a 5 iirc.
I think it was a linear scale though because I didn't really notice anything from the little bit I put on my sandwich. Put more on the other half and even then, it didn't leave much heat.
Yet if I eat a slice of fresh cayenne when cooking, it will burn intensely for a good 5 minutes and I know that it's only around the middle of the spice scale, which is logarithmic.
I wish humans didn't have the ego issue that results in "some products are labeled very spicy when they aren't so that fragile egos can act like they can handle more spice than they really can". I'm kinda tired of needing to calibrate every single spicy thing trying to find some good heat without worrying about whether the extreme spice warning is accurate or just playing into that ego thing. I want enjoyable heat, not burn your face off.
Though I suppose part of it might be because I don't think a single person can accurately measure the amount of heat in a variety of sauces from mild to very hot. Your own tolerance plays an important role and everything less spicy than your ideal will seem barely spicy at all and everything more will seem very spicy.
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buddahriffic@lemmy.worldreplied to mspenguinette@lemmy.world last edited by
I think that's the difference. Someone who does enjoy it will quickly build a tolerance to that level of spice.
My cousin once drank from a Sriracha sauce bottle like it was a water bottle because he enjoyed the flavour that much. He regretted it when he realized that his mouth had built more tolerance than his other end, though.
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bluesquid0741@lemmy.sdf.orgreplied to ilhamagh@lemmy.world last edited by
Absolutely. A very nice chili for sweetness.
Last time my parents visited us my mum had some smoked jalapeno sauce because “it looked like we were enjoying it so much”, and afterwards she thought we were trying to kill her.
My dad just said something like “no thank you, I’ve seen people eat those things on the footy show. Stupid.”
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Voytrekkreplied to buddahriffic@lemmy.world last edited by
How does one build up a tolerance on the other end?
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buddahriffic@lemmy.worldreplied to Voytrekk last edited by
Spicy enemas. Or by regularly consuming so much spice that some makes it to that end, since binding to a heat receptor uses it up, as I understand it.