i have seen many recipes on the internet where the chefs initially use hot peppers then discard them and continue on cooking. i have also seen it done with garlic - i always just chop and cook.
aside from no seeds, what other benefits would there be to removing the chili during the cooking process? would it make the dish less hot? or once the capsaicin oil is released into the cooking, that's it the heat value stands.
or in some cultures, does the eater actually look forward to finding the whole ripe chili as a treat during eating....much like the tequila drinker finally reaching the agave worm in his mezcal bottle. or eating the hard crisp rice cake that is left at the bottom of cooking rice(that one i couldn't believe, i was run over by a heard of vietnamese in my own house, just to have a piece of this hard crusty rice).
just curious.
aside from no seeds, what other benefits would there be to removing the chili during the cooking process? would it make the dish less hot? or once the capsaicin oil is released into the cooking, that's it the heat value stands.
or in some cultures, does the eater actually look forward to finding the whole ripe chili as a treat during eating....much like the tequila drinker finally reaching the agave worm in his mezcal bottle. or eating the hard crisp rice cake that is left at the bottom of cooking rice(that one i couldn't believe, i was run over by a heard of vietnamese in my own house, just to have a piece of this hard crusty rice).
just curious.