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Anyone tried one of these?
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Moderators: carlson1, Charles L. Cotton
I remember when I first moved to Texas... I planted some Jalapenos and when the first harvest came in, I washed one off, took a bit and spent the next 45 mins trying to kill the heat. LOLsecure wrote:The heat comes on immediately and lasts a good half hour. It intensifies for about the first 10 minutes then it plains out.
I have seen people selling theirs on ebay for $5 each. Pretty crazy. I am not at a point where I have enough ripe peppers to give out. They are slow to ripen.
As for the taste, its practically nonexistent, just instant heat!! Pores open quickly. I think my ears actually were sweating.
Meeeeee too! My first & only experience with those was when I was 15 and visiting a friend out in the country. They had a bowl sitting on the kitchen table that they'd just picked from the garden. I asked what those were and Larry's dad said they were mild sweet peppers. I popped 2 in my mouth and chewed on them until my lower lip caught on fire and slid off my face to the floor!WildBill wrote:I haven't tried the Ghost Pepper, but Chile Pequins are the hottest pepper that I have ever seen or eaten. They make jalapenos and habeneros seem wimpy. They are readily available in Mexico or in the Texas border towns like McAllen. I used to get ;home-grown peppers from my friends in Mexico or at the HEB in Edinburg. They are available dried at most stores, but are hard to find fresh. In Houston, I have had some success buying the fresh peppers at stores that cater to the Mexicans. The fully grown pepper ia smaller than a green pea, but they have more heat than anything I have ever tasted. I have tried to grow them, but without sucess. Apparently the pepper has to be eaten and digested by a bird in order to make the seeds sprout.
Do not let this information out, the brady bunchers will want pepper licensing. IT'S FOR THE CHILDREN!!!TXlaw1 wrote:Secure - your second picture reminded me of an incident over 50 years ago when I was a missionaries kid in Jamaica. Just outside the back door was a pepper plan with peppers that looked a lot like those. My baby brother, about 2 years old, got into these pretty peppers, smash them in his little hands, and rubbed them on this face, in his eyes and his mouth. I remember the hours of screaming in pain the whole family endured as my parents did all they could to stop the burning. It still in vivid as I relive that situation now.
So if anyone has pepper plants that toddlers could get into, please take necessary precautions to avoid such a painful event.
Eesh! I'll stick to Habaneros and call it good. Ghost Peppers are one of those 'try and die' peppers...lolsecure wrote:I think the scale puts the Chile Pequin around 30-60k scoville area.
The ghost pepper is not an enjoyable experience if you ask me but its one to mark off the bucket list.