By Elena Ferretti – FOXNews.com
Foxnews.com investigates why they hurt so good.
Where there’s fire there’s heat, and sometimes there’s even booze, like at Salvador Molly’s “Great Ball of Fire” contest. Salvador Molly’s in Portland, Oregon is serious about heat. Cold beer, serious. Cold milk, serious. “Toughest Tongue in the West,” serious. $7.95 gets you five minced habanero pepper fritters mixed with cotija, a Mexican cow’s milk cheese that’s mixed with spices. Down all five and you’re in the “Hall of Flame,” says co-owner and general manager Darrielle Sadle-Ruff. “And you’ve got to eat them with our ‘Sunshine and Pain’ salsa – hotter than the fritter,” she laughs. She’s only ever managed to eat one.
Thirteen years ago Darrielle’s father, Rick Sadle and original chef, Scott Moritz opened “Salvador Molly’s Tamale Cart” at the Portland Farmer’s Market. The cart became a café and the café a family restaurant, bar and hangout. The hot pepper contest originated as a way of having fun then became a way of doing good. Every February, all “Great Balls of Fire” proceeds go to Oregon Heat, a non-profit that helps families settle their heating bills. This local and highly idiosyncratic contest now attracts heat-seekers from all over the US. “It brings all sorts of fun people through our doors. They’re interested in the challenge aspect of it,” says Sadle-Ruff. The challenge interests them, but it’s the capsaicin that hooks them.
Capsaicin, says Danise Coon, Program Coordinator and Research Specialist at New Mexico State University’s Chile Pepper Institute, is the alkaloid that makes peppers hot. New Mexico is the U.S.’s top chile producer and the Institute is dedicated to raising our collective chile I.Q. Coon got a student job there while working towards an Ornamental Horticulture degree. Fifteen years later, she’s still there, still passionate about hot peppers. The pepper’s capsaicinoids, she says, bind with pain receptors in the mouth and throat that are responsible for sensing heat and convince your brain that you’ve eaten some sort of culinary lava. “Your brain literally thinks you’re on fire,” she says.
Your brain tries to put a whole of gone between your body and that pepper by speeding up heart rate and metabolism, firing up perspiration and salivation. You sweat, your nose runs, your eyes water, your gastrointestinal tract obeys no speed limit. And when it feels as if your sinuses have vaporized and your eardrums are on fire, your brain releases endorphins, opiate-like chemicals that reduce pain and induce a sense of well-being.
We enjoy eating hot peppers, says Coon, for the same reason that runners run – the endorphin-flooding runner’s high. Heat aficionados get the same endorphin high minus the bodily wear-and-tear and shin splints.
Hot or not, Coon wants you to know that “chili” and “chile” are not interchangeable. “Chili” is a culinary dish consisting of chile powder, beans, tomato and ground beef. “Chile” is anything consisting of the capsicum plant or the fruit from that plant. Chiles belong to the nightshade family along with tomatoes, potatoes and eggplants. Those mild foods also have capsaicin alkaloids but only in their leaves, stems and roots. In chiles they’re inside the fruit itself, specifically in the fruits’ placenta, the white soft tissue that the seeds are attached to. The heat is not, as many people think, in the seeds.
Chiles originated in a remote area between Bolivia and Brazil, she says, and were spread painlessly by foraging and migrating birds as they lack capsaicin pain receptors in their mouths. Chiles were initially used medicinally before being integrated into food. According to “The Complete Chili Pepper Book” by Dave DeWitt and Paul Bosland, “archeological evidence from Mexico indicates that humans have possibly been using wild chile peppers as a food source for at least 7200 years.” Today they’re used in everything from lipstick and to food dyes, to disposable heat wraps, riot-quelling sprays and keeping flamingoes feathers pink. And of course, food.
A pepper’s “pungency,” its capsaicin level, is expressed in SHU, Scoville Heat Units. Guinness’ hottest pepper on record, the Bhut Jolokia (“ghost chile”) from Assam, India, and discovered by Chile Pepper Institute scholar, Paul Bosland, measures a blistering 855,000 to 1,050,000 SHU. (The Infinity Chile, bred in Grantham, UK earlier this month measured 1,067,000 SHU but is so far unconfirmed by Guinness). The Red Savina rates 300,000 to 550,000 SHU. Habaneros and Scotch Bonnets ring in at 100,000 to 350,000 SHU. Jalapenos, the hot peppers most familiar to us are a mere 2500 to 8000 SHU. “Law enforcement grade” pepper spray ranges from 5,000,000 to 5,300,000 SHU. Pure capsaicin? At 16,000,000 SHU, don’t even think about it.
If you’re an internal thermodynamic conflagration fan and can’t get to Salvador Molly’s, CaJohn’s Fiery Foods of Columbus, Ohio has “Holy Jolokia” hot sauce made from Bhut Jolokias. It’s more of a Louisiana style, mash-based hot sauce says Coon. “The pain is intense so we toned it down,” she says. “We didn’t want it to melt your face off.” A percentage of each sale funds further research and education at the Chile Pepper Institute.
Meltdown Maven, Sadle-Ruff, says pineapple juice better neutralizes hot peppers than cold beer and cold milk. “We actually have people sign a release before eating saying that they’re responsible for freely ingesting the fritters,” she chuckles. She says it’s just a matter time before Bhut Jolokias debut at Salvador Molly’s. They’ll undoubtedly gain a following. One man’s intestinal inferno is another man’s pleasure.
Source: http://www.foxnews.com/leisure/2010/04/26/devilish-world-hot-peppers/

04/28/2010 at 7:36 am
Nice read Brother….
JBJ
04/28/2010 at 9:40 am
That’s great Scott.The fritters sound interesting and delicious but Portland is a long way to travel.I’ll have to make my own this fall.
04/28/2010 at 10:54 am
If you’re an internal thermodynamic conflagration fan and can’t get to Salvador Molly’s, CaJohn’s Fiery Foods of Columbus, Ohio has “Holy Jolokia” hot sauce made from Bhut Jolokias. It’s more of a Louisiana style, mash-based hot sauce says Coon. “The pain is intense so we toned it down,” she says. “We didn’t want it to melt your face off.”
They should not “water” it down, let the people that ca handle it buy it. I live in st Paul MN, Where it is made up of good spice hating Swedish. My wife jokes and says that MN is the land where Ketchup is spicy.
I hate it when people put down on the menu, inferno heat level or things along that line, just to find out it is only Franks red hot. I never shy away from a waiver sighing hot eating contest. The Hotter the better. It really bugs me to have something claim intense heat, only to find out my non heat eating wife can handle it. Rick b
04/28/2010 at 2:17 pm
Rick, u better come to Jungle Jim’s for Weekend of Fire to enter the World Champion Deathmatch. You can hang at the bloggers booth, we can talk about Lesner vs Carwin and who will win and who should win the UFC gold. Good times and you will get a nice appreciation for the chicken wing contest.
Btw…CaJohns motto is Flavor over Fire and not the other way around. A huge reason he has won more trophies than all the other fiery food makers. Holy Jolokia was made for the Chile Pepper Institute to raise money for further research.
04/28/2010 at 3:10 pm
Where is Jungle Jim’s held?
As far as Carwin vs Lesner, I’m putting my money on Carwin, I really want him to knock brock out. Rick b
04/28/2010 at 3:19 pm
Hey Budda,
I just looked it up on line, While I would love to go, I cannot. It would be over a 12 hour drive one way and I am working 2 part time jobs and a full time student. Do you guys know if they have any shows like this in Minnesota or even Chicago or close by to my area? Thanks, Rick b
04/28/2010 at 5:50 pm
In the world champion death match, what do they eat, and what sauce is used? Thanks, Rick b
04/28/2010 at 7:22 pm
I seen that place on Man Vs Food, where he did the challenge. They did pump alot of habs in there.
Rick B. I work in White Bear Lake, Mn. & contacted Buffalo Wild Wings to do a restaraunt review and get my name on the wall of flame for eating their hottest wings in a certain time period.
Your more than welcome to join me & do a two man review of the place if you want.
04/28/2010 at 10:12 pm
Rick, Defcon’s own Deathmatch sauce is used. It’s a very hot extract sauce that John said might be roughly 800,000 SHU this year.
Participants have to ingest 10 Deathmatch wings within 4 minutes. After that 4 minutes is up, they must them place their hands palms down on the table for 5 minutes without lifting them up. Doing so will disqualify you. The first person to have consumed all of their wings and make it through the 5 minute period wins.
Marv, here’s my experience with the BWW Blazin’ Challenge: http://www.scottrobertsweb.com/Scott-Tackles-the-Buffalo-Wild-Wings-Blazin-Challenge
04/28/2010 at 10:15 pm
Rick, there’s not really any hot sauce shows in the midwest (other than the WOF). The closest thing would be a fancy food show.
04/28/2010 at 11:51 pm
I will check out your thoughts on the blazin wings later, I did the challenge in less than 2 minutes.
Marv, you can contact me at iplayjudo1970@hotmail.com I would love to meet up and eat hot food. Rick b
04/29/2010 at 12:29 am
Sorry, I was out most of the day today. Scott pretty much gave all the details. Just to let you know many people travel near and far for this event and CaJohn’s Open House. Too bad the part-time jobs would hold you back. It is worth going. My ride should be about 8 hours from VA. I think it took us 10 hours this past time because of traffic and rest stops.
I hope Lesner comes in fit and ready for the fight after such a long lay off. Carwin has not gone past the 1st round, so the prospect of Lesner and Carwin going past 1 round is exciting for me. I think it will be exciting and either monster can take this. Lesner’s wrestling background will be a huge factor, and I give him the edge if he is healthy. Lesner is from Minnysoda, so I thought you would be rooting for him. I would like Carwin to win too, but I want to see them go more than 1 run before someone rocks the other.
04/29/2010 at 10:35 am
Carin is a wrestler also, and has trained with Brock in the past. They know each other on a pretty limited basis.
Even though I am living in MN, I am not from here, and I do not care for Brock or how he walked into the UFC, Lost his first fight, took his second to a decision and then his 3rd fight was for the title. When many fighters have over 10 straight wins and have not had a shot at the title.
I understand that, that was Dana whites thing, but still Brock could have manned up and said no, I will fight some more. Sadly Brocks character is not like that. Then for all the Tito Ortis fans, he was arrested for beating his new girl friend Jenna J. She’s going to press charges and he’s trying to make it sound like it was all her fault, He’s a dirt bag who should never be allowed to fight again.
I looked it over for traveling prices, It would cost me over a 1,000 dollars to go out their for a couple of days and bring my wife with me, I would need to fly out since it would be over 12 hour drive and I cannot take that kind of time off of both work and school. I have a perfect record at school and am getting a 3.8 GPA which after this class will go up to a 3.9 GPA. School is a whopping 42,000 dollars and I am getting all that I can out of it. Thanks for the invite and information. Rick b
04/29/2010 at 10:44 am
I’m wondering, whats the fastest time for eating the 10 wings? Rick b
04/29/2010 at 3:55 pm
Those guys that heat the death match wings are nuts!
04/29/2010 at 7:24 pm
Rick,
I don’t know what the record is. Hudd won it last year and I think his time was something like 1:48. The he had to wait for the remainder of of the four minutes for the other contestants to finish, and then go through the additional 5-minute period.
04/29/2010 at 7:34 pm
The past winners of Defcon’s death match were eating mild sauce…..sorry kids. Every year it gets hotter. Hudd has eaten the hottest (so far). 800,000 su sauce on wings? That’ll be fun to watch. All hail the new (hotter sauce) death match champ!
04/29/2010 at 7:43 pm
Huv there was a day when you could eat with the best off them….If any one is going to have a chance it will be you..
JBJ