What is the hottest hot sauce out there...

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ElFenix

Elite Member
Super Moderator
Mar 20, 2000
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Originally posted by: diskop
Hmmm, Dave's Hot sauce? I wonder if they sell that in CA?

its made in san fran, so i would think so. they ship everywhere i think. dave's insanity sauce.
 

weirdichi

Diamond Member
Sep 19, 2001
4,711
2
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Best hot sauce WITH taste out there is ye 'ol Hot Srirachi sauce you get at PHO places. That stuff will go great with steaks, chicken, vegetables, EVERYTHING! :)
 

vash

Platinum Member
Feb 13, 2001
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In my quest for hot food, I found THIS website

Mohotta.com is really a good place for hot stuff and will explain the scoville scale for ya. For the record, I ate 125,000 scoville sauce and it was HOT. There are things hotter, but do we really NEED it? ;)

vash
 

UNCjigga

Lifer
Dec 12, 2000
25,251
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Hmm, there was this HUGE thread about hot sauces like a year or two ago...I dunno if you can still find it in the archives but there were a lot of good suggestions.
 

Miramonti

Lifer
Aug 26, 2000
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Sixteen hours after deciding to end it all and writing the note, I realized that my plan for a slow, but painless death of suicide by masturbation was not working.

I hope that came from something really funny because I think it qualifies as one of the stupidest sigs ever. :D
 

Moonbeam

Elite Member
Nov 24, 1999
74,043
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"All hot peppers contain capsaicinoids, natural substances that produce a burning sensation in the mouth, causing the eyes to water and the nose to run, and even induce perspiration. Capsaicinoids have no flavor or odor, but act directly on the pain receptors in the mouth and throat. The primary capsaicinoid, capsaicin, is so hot that a single drop diluted in 100,000 drops of water will produce a blistering of the tongue.

"Capsaicinoids are found primarily in the pepper's placenta--the white "ribs" that run down the middle and along the sides of a pepper. Since the seeds are in such close contact with the ribs, they are also often hot. In the rest of the vegetable, capsaicinoids are unevenly distributed throughout the flesh, so it is likely that one part of the same pepper may be hotter ot milder than another. You can reduce the amount of heat in a chili pepper by removing the ribs and seeds, but you must wear gloves while doing so.

"Capsaicinoid content is measured in parts per million. These parts per million are converted into Scoville heat units, the industry standard for measuring a pepper's punch. One part per million is equivalent to 15 Scoville units. Bell peppers have a value of zero Scoville units, whereas habaneros -- the hottest peppers--register a blistering 200,000 to 300,000.Pure capsaicin has a Scoville heat unit score of 16 million."