In one New Mexico-based study, students were fed jalapeno peppers. So endorphins could contribute to pepper tolerance by blocking the hot sensation, explains Paul Bosland, a horticulture professor at New Mexico University and director of the Chile Pepper Institute. It makes them feel good.”Įndorphins are also a natural pain reliever. “So people addicted to the high that they get from eating peppers,” he says. Endorphins are chemicals released in the brain when someone gets high from exercising or taking drugs. Some people like spicy food for the endorphin rush, says Ed Currie, who first bred the Carolina Reaper. “In that cylinder - I guess many people keep cocaine - I have superhot chili powder,” DeWitt says. It comes in handy when he travels to places that serve bland food. Nonetheless, he carries a small cylinder with pepper powder on his key chain. Yet as teenagers we may learn to associate the pain and eye-watering experience of eating spicy food with having fun with friends, he says, so a social influence is at play.ĭewitt lives in Albuquerque, New Mexico, where people eat spicy foods every day. In Australia and the U.S., spicy food typically is not a natural part of what people eat every day, says Prescott. In Mexico, a family typically adds chili to the food at the table, so a child growing up in such a family may develop that flavor preference. In India, for instance, some mothers put a tiny bit of chili on their babies’ lips to help them become accustomed to the sensation, says Prescott. That’s genetically determined.”īut Prescott also suggests one can develop a taste for spicy foods through cultural or social influences, regardless of genetic inheritance. “What could be extremely painful to one person may be far less painful to another. “In other words, people with different trigeminal fibers do feel different levels of heat,” says John Prescott, experimental psychologist and author of the book Taste Matters. Genetics also can determine variations in the number of taste buds and associated nerve fibers in your mouth. A study of twins by researchers at the University of Helsinki revealed that 18 to 58 percent of the pungency sensation can be explained genetically. “So you have to say she was born with no capsaicin receptor,” says food historian Dave DeWitt, who has written many books on chili peppers. When Tamuli squeezed the juice of a 1-million-SHU pepper into her eye in 2009, she had almost no reaction. The receptors also exist in other mucous membranes, such as the eye, and send similar signals that make your eyes water when you eat something spicy.Ī woman in India, Anandita Dutta Tamuli, may be an example of the lucky few who have no such receptors. When binding with capsaicin, these receptors send “Hot! Hot!” signals to the brain via the trigeminal and vagus nerves. Some people inherit fewer of the capsaicin-detecting receptors that typically line your mouth and throat, making them less sensative to the irritating compound in spicy foods. The spicy-hot story starts before we are born. Why do some pepper eaters calmly bear the sensation whereas others react so dramatically after a single bite? How well people can tolerate the Reaper’s spiciness varies widely. Rated at more than 1.5 million Scoville heat units (SHU), the accepted scale for pungency or spicy heat, the Reaper falls right below the pepper spray police use for crowd control, which is 2-5.3 million SHU. “I ate 6 of them at one time,” posted Anina Skeel Holbek Thomsen. And earlier this year, Wayne Algenio ably downed 22 Carolina Reapers in 60 seconds, setting his own world record. The video currently has 8.5 million views.Īt the Guinness Book of World Records website, some commenters sound much more relaxed about the Carolina Reaper pepper, a hybrid of a ghost pepper and a red habanero. One of the women had to use an inhaler to help her breathe. Several seconds of moderate complaints, spitting and hand flapping preceded screams, makeup-smearing tears, and even vomit. Two young women posted a video in late August of their reactions after taking a bite of the Reaper. The Carolina Reaper, the Guinness Book of World Records’ hottest pepper, recently got its five minutes of fame. Out of the wild and onto your plate Hannah Newman
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