The ramble gets to growing at the end.
I was answering a question about Blair's 16 Million Reserve crystals, explaining that it is not a hot sauce and you can not achieve 16,000,000 SHU with a liquid. Suddenly it occurred to me that the entire bragging rights thing for hottest pepper in the world is bunk. SHU is a measurement of dry material. The measurement reflects how much heat is in a specific volume of dried material. It does not, in any way, shape, or form reflect the amount of that dried material in a fresh pepper. One pepper might have tons of water, the other very little. If the two peppers rate identically on that scale, the one with less water is actually hotter.
Then something else occurred to me. If the title is 'the hottest pepper' rather than 'the hottest pepper per dried mass' or some such thing, than if two peppers have the same shu but one is larger, the larger would be the hotter pepper because as a whole thing (a pepper) it has more heat. That got me to thinking about growing.
A great many people feel dry conditions promote the production of capsaicin (the hot). I have read many who have the opinion that this is a survival mechanism because the capsaicin protects the seeds. Thing is, I think the capsaicin protects seeds from some preditors and bacteria. I do not think it protects them from drought. So I wonder if pods that come from plants that have been deprived water only seem hotter when the pods are fresh.
That is, maybe a well watered plant produces the same amount of capsaicin in those pods but it is less noticeable because it is diluted with more water.
Anyone have insight or opinion?
I was answering a question about Blair's 16 Million Reserve crystals, explaining that it is not a hot sauce and you can not achieve 16,000,000 SHU with a liquid. Suddenly it occurred to me that the entire bragging rights thing for hottest pepper in the world is bunk. SHU is a measurement of dry material. The measurement reflects how much heat is in a specific volume of dried material. It does not, in any way, shape, or form reflect the amount of that dried material in a fresh pepper. One pepper might have tons of water, the other very little. If the two peppers rate identically on that scale, the one with less water is actually hotter.
Then something else occurred to me. If the title is 'the hottest pepper' rather than 'the hottest pepper per dried mass' or some such thing, than if two peppers have the same shu but one is larger, the larger would be the hotter pepper because as a whole thing (a pepper) it has more heat. That got me to thinking about growing.
A great many people feel dry conditions promote the production of capsaicin (the hot). I have read many who have the opinion that this is a survival mechanism because the capsaicin protects the seeds. Thing is, I think the capsaicin protects seeds from some preditors and bacteria. I do not think it protects them from drought. So I wonder if pods that come from plants that have been deprived water only seem hotter when the pods are fresh.
That is, maybe a well watered plant produces the same amount of capsaicin in those pods but it is less noticeable because it is diluted with more water.
Anyone have insight or opinion?