CaptDave
Posts: 659
Joined: 6/21/2002 From: Federal Way, WA Status: offline
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quote:
ORIGINAL: Shark7 quote:
ORIGINAL: Cribtop Mike, it's funny you mention that. I stood in the spice tolerance line first. Jalapenos are a gateway drug. I regularly eat habaneros, scotch bonnets, even a wild concoction made from pure capsacin that a friend once tried and had to go home from work for the day (even I think that one is pretty hot). My Southeastern relatives are appalled at our spicy food, while we laugh at the Yanks who actually successfully demanded that Pace genetically engineer a jalapeño without capsacin because even the Mild picante sauce was "too hot." If my life ever depended on winning one contest there is no question I would pick a pepper eating contest. Hehe, that is so true. A word of warning to our east coast/northern friends. Just pass on the chili, you can't handle it. Around here we like to put Serrano peppers in with our French fries. That's right folks, we fry up French fries with Serrano peppers as part of the mix. And I love to get the peppers out and eat them whole, seeds and all. The only chili I ever had in Texas was some of the wimpiest stuff ever (Texas Chili Parlor, in Austin, 5-star variety; I even had 3 or 4 bowls and didn't feel any effects). Can't say I've tried eating Serrano peppers straight, but I have been known to pour enough pepper sauce into a bowl of gumbo that the soup was red instead of brown. For the record, I've never lived farther south than San Mateo, CA, aside from my two years on Guam. Some of us Yankees can handle the hot stuff pretty well, too! (As long as it's food, not the climate, that is.)
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