Hot Pepper
Chili peppers originated in Central or South America and were first cultivated in Mexico. European explorers brought chili peppers back to the Old World in the late 16th century as part of the Columbian Exchange, which led to the cultivation of multiple varieties across the world for food and traditional medicine. Five Capsicum species have been widely cultivated: annuum, baccatum, chinense, frutescens, and pubescens.
History
Origins
Capsicum plants originated in modern-day Peru and Bolivia, and have been a part of human diets since about 7,500 BC. They are one of the oldest cultivated crops in the Americas. Chili peppers were cultivated in east-central Mexico some 6,000 years ago, and independently across different locations in the Americas including highland Peru and Bolivia, central Mexico, and the Amazon. They were among the first self-pollinating crops cultivated in those areas.
Peru has the highest diversity of cultivated Capsicum; it is a center of diversification where varieties of all five domesticates were introduced, grown, and consumed in pre-Columbian times. The largest diversity of wild Capsicum peppers is consumed in Bolivia. Bolivian consumers distinguish two basic forms: ulupicas, species with small round fruits including C. eximium, C. cardenasii, C. eshbaughii, and C. caballeroi landraces; and arivivis with small elongated fruits including C. baccatum var. baccatum and C. chacoense varieties.
Distribution to Europe
When Christopher Columbus and his crew reached the Caribbean, they were the first Europeans to encounter Capsicum fruits. They called them "peppers" because, like black pepper (Piper nigrum), which had long been known in Europe, they have a hot spicy taste unlike other foods. Chilies were first brought back to Europe by the Spanish, who financed Columbus's voyages, at the start of the large-scale interchange of plants and culture between the New World and the Old World called the Columbian exchange. Chilies appear in Spanish records by 1493. Unlike Piper vines, which grow naturally only in the tropics, chilies could be grown in temperate climates. By the mid-1500s, they had become a common garden plant in Spain and were incorporated into numerous dishes. By 1526, they had appeared in Italy, in 1543 in Germany, and by 1569 in the Balkans, where they came to be processed into paprika.
Distribution to the rest of the world
The rapid introduction of chilies to Africa and Asia was likely through Portuguese and Spanish traders in the 16th century, though the details are unrecorded. The Portuguese introduced them first to Africa and Arabia, and then to their colonies and trading posts in Asia, including Goa, Sri Lanka, and Malacca. From there, chilies spread to neighboring regions in South Asia and western Southeast Asia via local trade and natural dispersal. Around the same time, the Spanish also introduced chilies to the Philippines, where they spread to Melanesia, Micronesia, and other Pacific Islands via their monopoly of the Manila galleons. Their spread to East Asia in the late 16th century is less clear, but was likely also through local trade or through Portuguese and Spanish trading ports in Canton, China, and Nagasaki, Japan. The earliest known mention of the chili pepper in Chinese writing dates to 1591, though the pepper is thought to have entered the country in the 1570s.
Producing chili peppers
Cultivation
Chili peppers are the shiny, brightly coloured fruits of species of Capsicum. Botanically they are berries. The plants are small, 20 to 60 centimetres (7.9 to 23.6 in) depending on variety, making them suitable for growing in pots, greenhouses, or commercially in polytunnels. The plants are perennial, provided they are protected from cold. The fruits can be green, orange, red, or purple, and vary in shape from round and knobbly to smooth and elongated. If the fruits are picked green and unripe, more flowers develop, yielding more fruit; fruits left on the plant can become hotter in taste, and acquire their ripe coloration, at the price of a reduced harvest.
Ideal growing conditions for peppers include a sunny position with warm, loamy soil, ideally 21 to 29 °C (70 to 84 °F), that is moist but not waterlogged. The seeds germinate only when warm, close to 21 °C (70 °F). The plants prefer warm conditions, but can tolerate temperatures down to 12 °C (54 °F); and are sensitive to cold. The flowers can self-pollinate. However, at extremely high temperatures, 30 to 38 °C (86 to 100 °F), pollen loses viability, and its flowers are much less likely to result in fruit. For flowering, Capsicum is a non-photoperiod-sensitive crop.
Chilies are vulnerable to pests including aphids, glasshouse red spider mite, and glasshouse whitefly, all of which feed on plant sap. Common diseases include grey mould caused by Botrytis cinerea; this rots the tissues and produces a brownish-grey mould on the surface.
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Young plants
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Buds and flowers
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Immature chilies in the field
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Ripe chilies in the field, Myanmar
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Leaf damaged by aphids
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Ripe chili pepper with seeds
Preparation
Harvested chilies may be used fresh, or dried, typically on the ground in hot countries, to make a variety of products. Drying enables chilies grown in temperate regions to be used in winter. For home use, chilies can be dried by threading them with cotton and hanging them up in a warm dry place to dry.
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Chili peppers drying in Kathmandu, Nepal
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Guntur chilli drying in the sun, Andhra Pradesh, India
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New Mexico chiles dried on the plant in Mesilla, New Mexico
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Sundried chili at Imogiri, Yogyakarta, Indonesia
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Removing seeds and pith from dried chilies in San Pedro Atocpan, Mexico
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Smoke-dried chipotle
Products include whole dried chilies, chili flakes, and chili powder, Fresh or dried chilies are used to make hot sauce, a liquid condiment—usually bottled for commercial use—that adds spice to other dishes. Dried chilies are used to make chili oil, cooking oil infused with chili.
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Dried chili pepper flakes, Myanmar
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Chili powder, India
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Brands of hot sauce, California
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Chili oil
Annual production
Region | (Millions of tons) |
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China | 16.7 |
Mexico | 2.8 |
Indonesia | 2.8 |
Turkey | 2.6 |
Spain | 1.5 |
World | 36.1 |
Source: FAOSTAT of the United Nations |
In 2020, 36 million tonnes of green chilies and peppers (counted as any Capsicum or Pimenta fruits) were produced worldwide, with China producing 46% of the total.
Species and cultivars
Species of Capsicum that produce chili peppers are shown on the simplified phylogenetic tree, with examples of cultivars:
Capsicum |
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Cayenne peppers, a cultivar of Capsicum annuum
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Tabasco peppers, a cultivar of Capsicum frutescens, fruits pointing upwards
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Habanero peppers, a cultivar of Capsicum chinense
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Cubanelle peppers,
United States -
Scotch bonnets,
Caribbean -
Bird's eye chilies,
Thailand -
Cheongyang peppers,
South Korea
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Black Pearl cultivar of C. annuum
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Choricero,
Spain -
Purple chilies,
Myanmar
Intensity
Capsaicin
The substances that give chili peppers their pungency (spicy heat) when ingested or applied topically are capsaicin (8-methyl-N-vanillyl-6-nonenamide) and several related chemicals, collectively called capsaicinoids. Pure capsaicin is a hydrophobic, colorless, odorless, and crystalline-to-waxy solid at room temperature. The quantity of capsaicin varies by variety, and depends on growing conditions. Water-stressed peppers usually produce stronger fruits. When a habanero plant is stressed, for example by shortage of water, the concentration of capsaicin increases in some parts of the fruit.
When peppers are consumed by mammals such as humans, capsaicin binds with pain receptors in the mouth and throat, potentially evoking pain via spinal relays to the brainstem and thalamus where heat and discomfort are perceived. However, birds are unable to perceive the hotness and so they can eat some of the hottest peppers. The intensity of the "heat" of chili peppers is commonly reported in Scoville heat units (SHU), invented by American pharmacist Wilbur Scoville in 1912. Historically, it was a measure of the dilution of an amount of chili extract added to sugar syrup before its heat becomes undetectable to a panel of tasters; the more it has to be diluted to be undetectable, the more powerful the variety, and therefore the higher the rating. Since the 1980s, spice heat has been assessed quantitatively by high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC), which measures the concentration of heat-producing capsaicinoids, typically with capsaicin content as the main measure.
Capsaicin is produced by the plant as a defense against mammalian predators. A study suggests that by protecting against attack by a hemipteran bug, the risk of disease caused by a Fusarium fungus carried by the insects is reduced. As evidence, the study notes that peppers increased the quantity of capsaicin in proportion to the damage caused by fungi on the plant's seeds.
Intensity range of commonly-used cultivars
A wide range of intensity is found in commonly used peppers:
Bell pepper | 0 SHU |
Fresno, jalapeño | 3,500–10,000 SHU |
Cayenne | 30,000–50,000 SHU |
Piri piri, bird's eye | 50,000–100,000 SHU |
Habanero, Scotch bonnet | 100,000–350,000 SHU |
Hottest by country
The top 8 world's hottest chili peppers (by country) are:
Country | Type | Heat (SHU) |
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United States | Pepper X | 2.69M |
Wales | Dragon's Breath | 2.48M |
United States | Carolina Reaper | 2.2M |
Trinidad and Tobago | Trinidad moruga scorpion | 2.0M |
India | Ghost pepper (Bhut jolokia) | 1.58M |
Trinidad and Tobago | Trinidad Scorpion Butch T | 1.46M |
England | Naga Viper | 1.38M |
England | Infinity chili | 1.07M |
As food
Nutritional value
Nutritional value per 100 g (3.5 oz) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Energy | 166 kJ (40 kcal) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
8.8 g | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Sugars | 5.3 g | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Dietary fiber | 1.5 g | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
0.4 g | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
1.9 g | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Other constituents | Quantity | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Water | 88 g | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Capsaicin | 0.01g – 6 g | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Percentages estimated using US recommendations for adults, except for potassium, which is estimated based on expert recommendation from the National Academies. |
Red hot chili peppers are 88% water, 9% carbohydrates, 2% protein, and 0.4% fat (table). In a 100 gram reference amount, chili peppers supply 40 calories, and are a rich source of vitamin C and vitamin B6.
Pungency
Due to their unique pungency (spicy heat), chili peppers constitute a crucial part of many cuisines around the world, particularly in Chinese (especially in Sichuanese food), Mexican, Thai, Indian, New Mexican cuisine and many other South American, Caribbean and East Asian cuisines. In 21st-century Asian cuisine, chili peppers are commonly used across many regions. Chili is a key ingredient in many curries, providing the desired amount of heat; mild curries may be flavoured with many other spices, and may omit chili altogether.
Cooking
Chilies with a low capsaicin content can be cooked like bell peppers, for example stuffing and roasting them. Hotter varieties need to be handled with care to avoid contact with skin or eyes; washing does not efficiently remove capsaicin from skin. Chilies can be roasted over very hot coals or grilled for a short time, as they break up if overcooked.
The leaves of every species of Capsicum are edible, being mildly bitter and nowhere near as hot as the fruits. They are cooked as greens in Filipino cuisine, where they are called dahon ng sili (literally "chili leaves"). They are used in the chicken soup tinola. In Korean cuisine, the leaves may be used in kimchi.
Regional cuisines
Chilies are present in many cuisines. In Peru, Papa a la huancaina is a dish of potatoes in a sauce of fresh cheese and aji amarillo chilies. In Thailand, kaeng tai pla fish curry is flavoured with a tai pla sauce made with garlic, shallots, galangal, kaffir lime, turmeric, fish paste, and bird's eye chilies. In Jamaica, jerk chicken is spiced with powerful habanero chilies and allspice. Goan vindaloo curry uses the extremely hot ghost pepper or bhut jolokia to create "perhaps [India's] hottest dish". In Bhutan, ema datshi, entirely made of chili mixed with local cheese, is the national dish. Many Mexican dishes use chilies of different types, including the jalapeño, poblano, habanero, serrano, chipotle, ancho, pasilla, guajillo, de árbol, cascabel and mulato. These offer a wide range of flavours including citrus, earthy, fruity, and grassy. They are used in many dishes and the spicy mole sauce and Mexican salsa sauces.
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Mexican lamb chops with guajillo chili sauce and charro beans
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Lamb Madras curry
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Pickled chili in India
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Chili pepper dip in a traditional restaurant in Amman, Jordan
Other uses
Ornamental plants
The contrast in color and appearance makes chili plants interesting to some as a purely decorative garden plant.
- Black pearl pepper: small cherry-shaped fruits and dark brown to black leaves
- Black Hungarian pepper: green foliage, highlighted by purple veins and purple flowers, jalapeño-shaped fruits
- Bishop's crown pepper, Christmas bell pepper: named for its distinct three-sided shape resembling a red bishop's crown or a red Christmas bell
Constrained risk-taking
Psychologist Paul Rozin suggests that eating ordinary chilies is an example of a "constrained risk" like riding a roller coaster, in which extreme sensations like pain and fear can be enjoyed because individuals know that these sensations are not actually harmful. This method lets people experience extreme feelings without any significant risk of bodily harm.
Topical use and health research
Capsaicin, the pungent chemical in chili peppers, is used as an analgesic in topical ointments, nasal sprays, and dermal patches to relieve pain. A 2022 review of preliminary research indicated that regular consumption of chili peppers was associated with weak evidence for a lower risk of death from cardiovascular diseases and cancer.
Chemical irritants
Capsaicin extracted from chilies is used in pepper sprays and some tear gas formulations as a chemical irritant, for use as less-lethal weapons for control of unruly individuals or crowds. Such products have considerable potential for misuse, and may cause injury or death.
Conflicts between farmers and elephants have long been widespread in African and Asian countries, where elephants nightly destroy crops, raid grain houses, and sometimes kill people. Farmers have found the use of chilies effective in crop defense against elephants. Elephants do not like capsaicin due to their large and sensitive olfactory and nasal system. The smell of chili causes them discomfort and deters them from feeding on the crops. By planting a few rows of the fruit around valuable crops, farmers create a buffer zone through which the elephants are reluctant to pass. Chili dung bombs are also used for this purpose. They are bricks made of mixing dung and chili, and are burned, creating a noxious smoke that keeps hungry elephants out of farmers' fields. This can lessen dangerous physical confrontation between people and elephants.
Birds do not have the same sensitivity to capsaicin as mammals, as they lack a specific pain receptor. Chili peppers are eaten by birds living in the chili peppers' natural range, possibly contributing to seed dispersal and evolution of the protective capsaicin in chili peppers, as a bird in flight can spread the seeds further away from the parent plant after they pass through its digestive system than any land or tree dwelling mammal could do so under the same circumstances, thus reducing competition for resources.
Etymology and spelling
The English word is from from Classical Nahuatl chīlli with the same meaning. The name of the plant is unrelated to that of the country Chile. While pepper originally meant the genus Piper, not Capsicum, the Oxford English Dictionary and Merriam-Webster record both usages.
The three primary spellings are chili, chile and chilli, all recognized by dictionaries.
- Chili is widely used in English of the United States and optionally in Canada.
- Chile is the most common Spanish spelling in Mexico and several other Latin American countries, and some parts of the United States.
- Chilli was the original Romanization of the Náhuatl language word for the fruit (chīlli), and is the preferred British spelling according to the Oxford English Dictionary. Chilli (and its plural chillies) is the most common spelling in former British colonies such as India and Sri Lanka.
Safety
The volatile oil in chili peppers may cause skin irritation, requiring hand washing and care when touching the eyes or any sensitive body parts. Consuming hot peppers may cause stomach pain, hyperventilation, sweating, vomiting, and symptoms possibly requiring hospitalization.
Unscrupulous traders have illegally added at least eight different synthetic dyes, including Auramine O, Chrysoidine, Sudan stains I to IV, Para red, and Rhodamine B to chili products. All these chemicals are harmful. They can be detected by liquid chromatography used together with mass spectrometry.
In popular culture
The 16th century Spanish missionary and naturalist José de Acosta noted the supposed aphrodisiac power of chilies, but wrote that they were harmful to people's spiritual health. In the 1970s, the government of Peru forbade prison inmates to consume chilies, their explanation being that these were "not appropriate for men forced to live a limited lifestyle."
See also
- Food and drink prohibitions – which in some cultures includes chili peppers
- Hatch, New Mexico – known as the "Chile Capital of the World"
- History of chocolate – which the Maya drank with ground chili peppers
- International Connoisseurs of Green and Red Chile – organization for the promotion of chili peppers
- Peppersoup
- Salsa (sauce)
- Sweet chili sauce – a condiment for adding a sweet, mild heat taste to food
Notes
References
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the stew of green peppers and cheese, fiery as arson, that is the national dish
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- ^ Kaur M, Verma BR, Zhou L, Lak HM, Kaur S, Sammour YM, et al. (March 2022). "Association of pepper intake with all-cause and specific cause mortality - A systematic review and meta-analysis". American Journal of Preventive Cardiology. 9: 100301. doi:10.1016/j.ajpc.2021.100301. PMC 8688560. PMID 34977833.
- ^ Haar RJ, Iacopino V, Ranadive N, Weiser SD, Dandu M (October 2017). "Health impacts of chemical irritants used for crowd control: a systematic review of the injuries and deaths caused by tear gas and pepper spray". BMC Public Health. 17 (1): 831. doi:10.1186/s12889-017-4814-6. PMC 5649076. PMID 29052530.
- ^ Mott M. "Elephant Crop Raids Foiled by Chili Peppers, Africa Project Finds". National Geographic. Archived from the original on 29 October 2013. Retrieved 23 October 2013.
- ^ "chili (n.)". Online Etymology Dictionary. Retrieved 11 October 2024.
- ^ "Chilli, chilly". Oxford English Dictionary. Vol. 2 C (1 Corrected re-issue ed.). Oxford, UK. 1933. p. 346. Retrieved 19 July 2021.
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: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - ^ "Pepper". OED. Vol. 7 N–Poy (1 Corrected re-issue ed.). Oxford, UK. 1913. p. 663. Retrieved 19 July 2021.
{{cite encyclopedia}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) (sense 2b of pepper) - ^ "pepper". Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary. Merriam-Webster. Retrieved 21 July 2021.
- ^ "Chili". Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary. Merriam-Webster. Retrieved 21 July 2021.
- ^ The Canadian Oxford Dictionary lists chili as the main entry.
- ^ Heiser C (August 1990). Seed To Civilization: The Story of Food. Cambridge: Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-79681-2.
- ^ "chile". Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary. Merriam-Webster. Retrieved 21 July 2021.
- ^ Usage example: "Fall in exports crushes chilli prices in Guntur". Thehindubusinessline.com. Retrieved 21 April 2012.
- ^ Usage example: "Chilli, Capsicum and Pepper are spicy plants grown for the pod. Green chilli is a culinary requirement in any Sri Lankan household". The Sunday Times. Retrieved 21 April 2012.
- ^ Beck A (8 May 2019). "How to Handle Hot Peppers and Chiles Safely". Better Homes and Gardens. Retrieved 23 July 2022.
- ^ Goldfrank LR, ed. (23 March 2007). Goldfrank's Toxicologic Emergencies. New York, New York: McGraw-Hill. p. 1167. ISBN 978-0-07-144310-4.
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- ^ Hospodar M (2004). "Aphrodisiac Foods: Bringing Heaven to Earth". Gastronomica. 4 (4): 82–93. doi:10.1525/gfc.2004.4.4.82. JSTOR 10.1525/gfc.2004.4.4.82.
External links
- Plant Cultures: Chilli pepper botany, history and uses
- The Chile Pepper Institute of New Mexico State University
- Capsicums: Innovative Uses of an Ancient Crop
- Chilli: La especia del Nuevo Mundo (Article from Germán Octavio López Riquelme about biology, nutrition, culture and medical topics. In Spanish)
- The Hot Pepper List List of chili pepper varieties ordered by heat rating in Scoville Heat Units (SHU)
- Agriculture in Mesoamerica
- Chili peppers
- Medicinal plants of Central America
- Medicinal plants of South America
- Crops originating from Ecuador
- Crops originating from Mexico
- Crops originating from Peru
- Symbols of New Mexico
- Leaf vegetables
- New Mexican cuisine
- Cuisine of the Southwestern United States
- Crops originating from the Americas
- Indian spices
- Crops
- Sri Lankan spices
- Mesoamerican cuisine
- Mexican cuisine
- Fruits originating in North America