venuseagle Snowy Owl


Joined: Jan 11, 2008 Age: 41 Posts: 147 Location: South of England, UK
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Posted: Sun Sep 14, 2008 6:10 pm Post subject: Hot chilli peppers? Are we sensory seeking? |
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Do you like eating hot chilli peppers? If so, what is the hottest that you can you cope with? Anyone here tried the Dorset Naga Chilli Peppers? They are supposed to be amongst the hottest group in the world. Hubby and I made a curry with 3 genuine Dorset Nagas which should have been almost inedible. We weren't quite satisfied and ended up adding more chilli peppers to up the heat. Later that day we chopped one chilli up and tried eating bits of it neat (we got through 4 pints of milk between us) - these chillies came from the farm that markets them in Dorset, not from a Supermarket. Interestingly there are some YouTube videos of people eating the Dorset Nagas. We grow chillies in our greenhouse but haven't managed to grow the really hot ones yet. The ones produced in a UK supermarket and sold as Dorset Nagas lacked any real heat. I'm not sure if our senses are duller than most, or if we are sensory seeking and enjoy the pain or the endorphins eating chilli peppers provides? Interestingly our 3 year old son is also on the spectrum and will eat curry.
Do you hate chilli peppers or love them? Do you prefer them with just a little heat, medium heat, or really hot? For all those chilli lovers, what is the very hottest chilli pepper you have ever managed to eat and could you describe your experience? I drink milk and pace. I would love to hear how you cope with the pain.
I am wondering if our love of fearsome chilli peppers is in part due to us being on the Autistic Spectrum. Most people would be horrified at the pain we choose to endure. Looking forward to your comments. Is it just us? Or do you too enjoy a hot chilli pepper? If you do, I am also interested to learn the name of the hottest curry you have ever eaten.
Venus |
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Coadunate Phoenix


Joined: Aug 14, 2008 Age: 56 Posts: 679 Location: S. California
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Posted: Sun Sep 14, 2008 6:17 pm Post subject: |
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| I love peppers and every other taste that is extreme like cumin, garlic, onions, curry and especially pickle juice with hot peppers. |
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venuseagle Snowy Owl


Joined: Jan 11, 2008 Age: 41 Posts: 147 Location: South of England, UK
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Posted: Sun Sep 14, 2008 6:22 pm Post subject: |
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| Thanks for your reply Coadunate. Pickle juice with hot peppers sounds nice. We also thrive on garlic and onions in this household, if a recipe says "one clove" of garlic we deliberately use an entire garlic. No wonder we aren't too popular amongst the NTs. |
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ShawnWilliam Phoenix


Joined: Aug 27, 2008 Posts: 1463
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Posted: Sun Sep 14, 2008 6:59 pm Post subject: |
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| eep, that's a little too much garlic for moi.. but i dont mind garlic, and yeah i guess i like hot peppers. I also like to bite into a lime sometimes.. |
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Atomsk Bass Fiend


Joined: Apr 10, 2008 Age: 24 Posts: 1539
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Posted: Sun Sep 14, 2008 7:08 pm Post subject: |
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| I generally like very spicy things, however I have tactile issues with chunks of stuff in very hot salsa. I'll just stick to the other hot foods :b. |
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Kauf039 Deinonychus


Joined: May 17, 2008 Age: 27 Posts: 306 Location: ON, Canada
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Posted: Sun Sep 14, 2008 7:58 pm Post subject: |
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Humm, I'm the exact opposite. I cannot stand anything hot. I like the taste of spicy food, but the actual heat drives me insane. I avoid anything that is even the least bit warm like the plague (much to the chagrin of my father). _________________ Humm, guess I should put something witty here, huh? |
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NeantHumain Phoenix

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Joined: Jun 25, 2004 Posts: 5119 Location: St. Louis, Missouri
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Posted: Sun Sep 14, 2008 8:04 pm Post subject: |
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I haven't tried the naga jolokia or Dorset naga pepper yet, nor have I tried the Red Savina pepper. I grow some plain old habanero peppers that I bought as saplings from a nursery, and they're pretty spicy but probably not as spicy as possible for an habanero. I've used one whole habanero as a topping for those microwavable personal-sized pizzas you can get at grocery stores. One with three avocados makes for a fairly spicy guacamole.
One time, I put a little habanero sauce on some nachos at La Salsa (it's a chain kind of like Chevy's); I couldn't taste it, so I added several ladle's worth more. It was too spicy, but I continued to eat it anyway because that was my dinner, so I just drank a ton of soda too. The next morning I was reeling from it; the capsaicin must have irritated my bowels considerably because I had diarrhea, and the spiciness remained going out.
There is a limit to the capsaicin a human body can handle. |
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Tim_Tex Professor Hineybottom


Joined: Jul 03, 2004 Age: 33 Posts: 41865 Location: Houston, Texas
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Posted: Sun Sep 14, 2008 8:11 pm Post subject: |
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I can't get enough of them!!! _________________ <<<=== This is not the devil, this is the Red Guy from Cow and Chicken. |
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NeantHumain Phoenix

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Joined: Jun 25, 2004 Posts: 5119 Location: St. Louis, Missouri
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Posted: Sun Sep 14, 2008 8:20 pm Post subject: |
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| By the way, is your sensory seeking circumscribed to food, or is it a sensory seeking more generally? For example, do you like roller coasters, bungee jumping, or skydiving/parachuting? |
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Horsa Tufted Titmouse


Joined: Jul 17, 2008 Age: 43 Posts: 33 Location: Belfast, N. Ireland
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Posted: Sun Sep 14, 2008 8:21 pm Post subject: |
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I've recently made a batch of maddness sauce with Dorset Nagas.
You need about 50...... Hard to come by.
Take 25 and blend them to a pulp.
Roast the other 25, till they're seared black but not burned.
To the chilli pulp add... about half a bottle of the clear vinegar, a full jar of American yellow mustard, a tablespoon or so of Garam Masala and the flesh of a whole mango... Then chop the roasted chillies finely. Mix all. Toss in some brown sugar.......
Dangerous sauce...
But chilli head heaven |
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Tim_Tex Professor Hineybottom


Joined: Jul 03, 2004 Age: 33 Posts: 41865 Location: Houston, Texas
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Posted: Sun Sep 14, 2008 9:36 pm Post subject: |
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I like that Sriracha sauce on everything. _________________ <<<=== This is not the devil, this is the Red Guy from Cow and Chicken. |
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Belfast Vast Ambivalence


Joined: Jul 18, 2005 Age: 40 Posts: 1718 Location: VT
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Posted: Sun Sep 14, 2008 9:53 pm Post subject: |
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Some folks' sense of taste (including smell perception, reactions of trigeminal nerve in back of throat that helps detect "hot" (spicy) foods, and so on) is hyper sensitive, others have hypo sensitivity in that modality.
I'm excessively sensitive to flavors, and can't stand spicy/hot tasting foods-thus I don't eat any sort of peppers.
So a person with an ASD-and/or sensory issues/differences-could be more or less sensitive/reactive to certain stimuli compared with any other person. Also, people just have different attractions (and aversions) as to flavors (and textures, mouthfeel, and chewiness, etc.) that appeal to (or repel) them, for reasons beyond our scientific understanding. _________________ *"You cannot administer a wicked law impartially-it destroys everyone it touches, its violators as well as its upholders."* |
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Electric_Kite Phoenix


Joined: Aug 21, 2008 Age: 38 Posts: 588 Location: crashing to the ground
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Posted: Sun Sep 14, 2008 10:27 pm Post subject: |
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I like hot peppers.
The hottest ones I have eaten were habeneros, raw, in little thin slices. They're okay. Aside from the hot, they're kind of boring. They are tastier dipped in honey. Hot honey is interesting.
Yoghurt cuts the burn better for me than milk. Flour tortillas work better than other kinds of bread, except maybe nan.
The hottest thing I have ever eaten is 'Da Bomb: Beyond Insanity' hot-sauce. I like hot better than anybody I know and would not recommend this stuff as a condiment, but it's an experience.
I'm not really into just plain hot, and like other flavours mixed in. Hot lime pickle is great. |
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brightblue Emu Egg


Joined: Apr 17, 2008 Posts: 4
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Posted: Sun Sep 14, 2008 10:28 pm Post subject: |
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| As a child, I was very sensitive to spicy foods. I couldn't stand anything with heat or other strong flavors. (I also had really strong reactions to grainy textures, like legumes.) As an adult, I can't get enough of spicy foods- though I have to watch myself or I get an upset stomach as well. I also love the other strong flavors someone mentioned above- garlic, curry, onions. I too am one of those people who will add an entire head of garlic when the recipe only calls for a clove! Now, roasted garlic smeared on toast... amazing! |
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vt420 Yellow-bellied Woodpecker


Joined: Aug 24, 2008 Age: 29 Posts: 53 Location: Portage, MI, USA
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Posted: Sun Sep 14, 2008 11:36 pm Post subject: |
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my local indian place makes some good hot lamb vindaloo...
i like my fajitas with a good amount of dave's insanity..
i haven't met anything hot enough to stop me from eating it yet.
i love spicy foods
I never attributed it to the aspie-ness... but i've always loved strong flavours, sour, spicy, garlic... etc
ohh and i absolutely love horseradish it's a totally different heat than chilis....
Jeff |
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