How to Break the Record for the World’s Hottest Pepper
There can be only one World’s Hottest. This article will attempt to give pointers to help you go from seed to Guinness World Record. This document is evolving and suggestions are welcomed to improve and refine.
Step 1: Selecting Parent Genetics
There are only two spots in the world where super hots come from - Trinidad and Tobago, and Indian and Bangladesh. All of the hundreds and hundreds of modern super hot strains are really just recombinations of these two landrace pepper lineages.
I have a hypothesis that combining these two lineages is capable of producing even hotter peppers through additive genetics. As an oversimplified hypothetical example, perhaps genes related to the capsaicin biosynthesis pathway are on chromosome 1 for an Indian pepper (like bhut jolokia) and similar genes are on chromosome 2 for a Trinidadian pepper (like 7 pot). After a cross, some of the offspring might have both of those gene copies, thus producing even more capsaicin. The reaper, primo, nagabrain, naga viper, bhutlah and many of the other world’s hottest were purportedly produced through these East/West crosses from Indian and Trinidad.
If this hypothesis is correct, it would explain why breeding closely related super hot peppers typically doesn’t produce a hotter pepper. Many of the genes are in the same location and crossing them only swaps copies, not adds them together.
Similar to the above method of crossing genetically distant Trinidadian and Indian peppers, I have it on good word that adding fatalii peppers (a landrace variety from the Democratic Republic of Congo) also produces some rippers, like the primotalii and the reapertalii. Perhaps they offer some limiting factor in the capsaicin biosynthesis pathway.
Step 2 - Crossing the Parents
Here is a helpful how-to video on cross pollinating peppers: Google "Hand-Pollinating Pepers at Johnny's Research Farm"
Step 3 - Selecting the Offspring
The first generation after a cross (called ‘F1’ in plant breeding) is ~50% the mother and ~50% the father. Because of this the offspring will be relatively uniform in traits. The generations subsequent are where the genes can get shuffled in weird combinations, resulting in very unique combinations. Remembering back to your grade school classes, you’ll recall the F2 generation (the second generation after a cross) is the most interesting.
More on complex inheritance: Google "Khan Academy Polygenic inheritance and environmental effects" (THP won't let me link)
In a practical sense, this is why you have to maximize the number of offspring you are growing out in the first few generations - especially F2 - in order to find rare gene combinations.
If you are selecting for heat, there are imperfect proxy ways that you can use, aside from getting it officially tested or going through a severe amount of pain. You can look for:
Once you have found the traits you want, the tough part is holding on to those traits over a number of generations.
Below is a nice table to numerically express how stabilization is achieved. This is purely theoretical and doesn’t account for the chromosomal position of genes or crossing over. To read more, Google: "Gene Segregation After a Cross tomato gene basics II"
F1: Heterozygous: 100%; Homozygous: 0%
F2: Heterozygous: 50%; Homozygous: 50%
F3: Heterozygous: 25%; Homozygous: 75%
F4: Heterozygous: 12.5%; Homozygous: 87.5%
F5: Heterozygous: 6.3%; Homozygous: 93.7%
F6: Heterozygous: 3.1%; Homozygous: 96.8%
F7: Heterozygous: 1.6%; Homozygous: 98.4%
F8: Heterozygous: 0.8%; Homozygous: 99.2%
F9: Heterozygous: 0.4%; Homozygous: 99.6%
F10: Heterozygous: 0.2%; Homozygous: 99.8%
F11: Heterozygous: 0.1%; Homozygous: 99.9%
There is debate over how many generations a pepper should be around before it is considered “stable.” Some say 5 generations, others 7. I’ll point out that the reaper was reportedly 10 years old when it first won the record.
Step 5 - Sampling
I have taken notice of the fact that Guinness points out that samples were taken “throughout” the year for the reaper. Perhaps this is part of their criteria? Do the samples need to be from multiple plants in multiple locations? I don’t know.
Peppers have peak capsaicin concentration right as they are turning their ripe color. After that there is a relatively significant drop as the capsaicin degrades. Articles on this:
While relatively heat stable, there is limited evidence to support that higher temperature drying may cause slight degradation of capsaicin: Montoya-Ballesteros, L. C., et al. "Impact of open sun drying and hot air drying on capsaicin, capsanthin, and ascorbic acid content in chiltepin (Capsicum annuum L. var. glabriusculum)." Revista Mexicana de Ingeniería Química 16.3 (2017): 813-825.
Step 7 - Testing
New Mexico University’s Chile Pepper Institute lists three reputable locations for HPLC, the gold standard for Scoville Heat Unit (SHU) measurement: Google "New Mexico State University Chile Pepper Institute Measuring Chile Pepper Heat" (THP doesn't let me link)
It’s worth noting that the reaper used Winthrop University, a university local to the growing location. Personal relationships with university or college faculty could allow for low cost (and perhaps favorable) testing.
Step 8 - The Guinness Hurdle
Here is a how-to guide for submitting to get a Guinness World Record: Google "The Complete Guide to Getting Your Own Guinness World Record" (THP doesn't let me link)
The Reaper Record: Google "Guinness World Records Hottest chilli pepper"
There can be only one World’s Hottest. This article will attempt to give pointers to help you go from seed to Guinness World Record. This document is evolving and suggestions are welcomed to improve and refine.
Step 1: Selecting Parent Genetics
There are only two spots in the world where super hots come from - Trinidad and Tobago, and Indian and Bangladesh. All of the hundreds and hundreds of modern super hot strains are really just recombinations of these two landrace pepper lineages.
I have a hypothesis that combining these two lineages is capable of producing even hotter peppers through additive genetics. As an oversimplified hypothetical example, perhaps genes related to the capsaicin biosynthesis pathway are on chromosome 1 for an Indian pepper (like bhut jolokia) and similar genes are on chromosome 2 for a Trinidadian pepper (like 7 pot). After a cross, some of the offspring might have both of those gene copies, thus producing even more capsaicin. The reaper, primo, nagabrain, naga viper, bhutlah and many of the other world’s hottest were purportedly produced through these East/West crosses from Indian and Trinidad.
If this hypothesis is correct, it would explain why breeding closely related super hot peppers typically doesn’t produce a hotter pepper. Many of the genes are in the same location and crossing them only swaps copies, not adds them together.
- Trinidadian Landrace Super Hots
- Trinidad Moruga scorpion
- 7 pot
- 7 pot brian strain
- Douglah
- Trinidad scorpion
- Bhut jolokia
- Bhut assam
- Dorset naga
- Naga morich
- Raja mirch
Similar to the above method of crossing genetically distant Trinidadian and Indian peppers, I have it on good word that adding fatalii peppers (a landrace variety from the Democratic Republic of Congo) also produces some rippers, like the primotalii and the reapertalii. Perhaps they offer some limiting factor in the capsaicin biosynthesis pathway.
Step 2 - Crossing the Parents
Here is a helpful how-to video on cross pollinating peppers: Google "Hand-Pollinating Pepers at Johnny's Research Farm"
Step 3 - Selecting the Offspring
The first generation after a cross (called ‘F1’ in plant breeding) is ~50% the mother and ~50% the father. Because of this the offspring will be relatively uniform in traits. The generations subsequent are where the genes can get shuffled in weird combinations, resulting in very unique combinations. Remembering back to your grade school classes, you’ll recall the F2 generation (the second generation after a cross) is the most interesting.
More on complex inheritance: Google "Khan Academy Polygenic inheritance and environmental effects" (THP won't let me link)
In a practical sense, this is why you have to maximize the number of offspring you are growing out in the first few generations - especially F2 - in order to find rare gene combinations.
If you are selecting for heat, there are imperfect proxy ways that you can use, aside from getting it officially tested or going through a severe amount of pain. You can look for:
- Waves, bumps, wrinkles, and crinkles - these are often indicators of a large amount of vesicles that can contain capsaicin.
- Visible oil on the inside walls of the pepper
- Large amount of placental tissue - this is the foamy and whiter part of the inside of a pepper, typically right next to the seeds, but for some very hot varieties, it is spread throughout the whole pod. It contains more capsaicin than other parts of the pepper.
- Prolonged ripening time (while annoying, this may allow for increased time for capsaicin buildup)
- Really hot powder. Eating a fresh pod is not the best way to figure out how hot something is per gram, given differences in pod size and where the oil is concentrated (inside the wall, on the wall, etc.). Comparing powder (or even powder immersed in oil), is much more accurate.
Once you have found the traits you want, the tough part is holding on to those traits over a number of generations.
Below is a nice table to numerically express how stabilization is achieved. This is purely theoretical and doesn’t account for the chromosomal position of genes or crossing over. To read more, Google: "Gene Segregation After a Cross tomato gene basics II"
F1: Heterozygous: 100%; Homozygous: 0%
F2: Heterozygous: 50%; Homozygous: 50%
F3: Heterozygous: 25%; Homozygous: 75%
F4: Heterozygous: 12.5%; Homozygous: 87.5%
F5: Heterozygous: 6.3%; Homozygous: 93.7%
F6: Heterozygous: 3.1%; Homozygous: 96.8%
F7: Heterozygous: 1.6%; Homozygous: 98.4%
F8: Heterozygous: 0.8%; Homozygous: 99.2%
F9: Heterozygous: 0.4%; Homozygous: 99.6%
F10: Heterozygous: 0.2%; Homozygous: 99.8%
F11: Heterozygous: 0.1%; Homozygous: 99.9%
There is debate over how many generations a pepper should be around before it is considered “stable.” Some say 5 generations, others 7. I’ll point out that the reaper was reportedly 10 years old when it first won the record.
Step 5 - Sampling
I have taken notice of the fact that Guinness points out that samples were taken “throughout” the year for the reaper. Perhaps this is part of their criteria? Do the samples need to be from multiple plants in multiple locations? I don’t know.
Peppers have peak capsaicin concentration right as they are turning their ripe color. After that there is a relatively significant drop as the capsaicin degrades. Articles on this:
- Barbero, Gerardo F., et al. "Evolution of total and individual capsaicinoids in peppers during ripening of the Cayenne pepper plant (Capsicum annuum L.)." Food chemistry 153 (2014): 200-206.
- Contreras-Padilla, Margarita, and Elhadi M. Yahia. "Changes in capsaicinoids during development, maturation, and senescence of chile peppers and relation with peroxidase activity." Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry 46.6 (1998): 2075-2079.
- Zhang, Zi-Xin, et al. "Discovery of putative capsaicin biosynthetic genes by RNA-Seq and digital gene expression analysis of pepper." Scientific reports 6.1 (2016): 1-14.
While relatively heat stable, there is limited evidence to support that higher temperature drying may cause slight degradation of capsaicin: Montoya-Ballesteros, L. C., et al. "Impact of open sun drying and hot air drying on capsaicin, capsanthin, and ascorbic acid content in chiltepin (Capsicum annuum L. var. glabriusculum)." Revista Mexicana de Ingeniería Química 16.3 (2017): 813-825.
Step 7 - Testing
New Mexico University’s Chile Pepper Institute lists three reputable locations for HPLC, the gold standard for Scoville Heat Unit (SHU) measurement: Google "New Mexico State University Chile Pepper Institute Measuring Chile Pepper Heat" (THP doesn't let me link)
It’s worth noting that the reaper used Winthrop University, a university local to the growing location. Personal relationships with university or college faculty could allow for low cost (and perhaps favorable) testing.
Step 8 - The Guinness Hurdle
Here is a how-to guide for submitting to get a Guinness World Record: Google "The Complete Guide to Getting Your Own Guinness World Record" (THP doesn't let me link)
The Reaper Record: Google "Guinness World Records Hottest chilli pepper"