Bird's eye chillies are very hot with SHU of 50,000 – 100,000. For the uninitiated, SHU stands for Scoville Heat Units, which is used to rate the hotness or piquancy of chillies.
Habaneros are exceptionally hot with SHU of 100,000 – 350,000. SHU stands for Scoville Heat Units, which is used to rate the hotness or piquancy of chillies. A new method is HPLC (High–Performance Liquid Chromatography).
In comparison, bird's eye chillies are very hot with SHU of 50,000 – 100,000. Go figure how pungent habaneros are.
Habaneros thrive in hot weather. Overly moist soil and roots will produce bitter–tasting chillies, so the trees should be watered only when dry.
2 comments:
Hi SkyJuice:)
Very informative post along with lovely photos.
You have provided a lot of information about chillies. Do you use plenty of chillies in your cooking? In Andhra Pradesh people eat raw chillies. I am scared of chillies. I was told too much chillies can produce ulcers.
Best wishes:)
Joseph
Thank you, Joseph. :-)
I do use chillies in my cooking, but not as much as some others especially the Thais. I'm not fond of eating raw chillies. Yes, we're told that too much of a good thing can be bad for us. Moderation is the key.
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