The scotch bonnets are not superhots. They are a little less hot than regular habaneros. There are a lot of fake Scotch bonnets being sold, so you gotta be careful, heh. I have some yellow (still green but I trust the person) ones that look authenic this year. Last year I was sold fake ones and traded for what looks like real ones on this site . I've been using chipotle moritas in my mild sauces for other people. These smoked jalapenos taste awesome.
They also make a great tasting BBQ sauce, which I just use tomato paste, molasses, liquid smoke, and lots of chipotles. It was a bit hot for my gf, but she loved the taste so much she ate a bunch of BBQ chicken . A good way to get people's tolerances up is to make a great tasting sauce. I made a 7 pot version for myself. Same ingredients with just dried 7 pot Jonahs added in. Sorry about the tangent on BBQ sauce.
PS
Are you looking for thick peppers so your sauces are thicker without having to use corn starch or another thickener? If that's the case, dried peppers thicken up sauces despite if they are thin walled or not. Thai chiles make a really good sauce imo. I use thai dragons, which are on the hotter end. However, I'd suggest trying a thai pepper that isn't as hot for your friends. They are so thin they will dry on the plant if you let them. I just put em in half vinegar and half water, then I put two limes in the mix and cook them before purée them. I am able to make the sauce thicker than I want so I can add water and vinegar to get the right consistency while purée them. A lot of people liked the thai flavor. The plants are prolific and seem to be the easiest ones I've grown. They are so easy I have an area that only gets partial sun where I put them due to lack of room. They still do well enough to give me lots of chiles.
They also make a great tasting BBQ sauce, which I just use tomato paste, molasses, liquid smoke, and lots of chipotles. It was a bit hot for my gf, but she loved the taste so much she ate a bunch of BBQ chicken . A good way to get people's tolerances up is to make a great tasting sauce. I made a 7 pot version for myself. Same ingredients with just dried 7 pot Jonahs added in. Sorry about the tangent on BBQ sauce.
PS
Are you looking for thick peppers so your sauces are thicker without having to use corn starch or another thickener? If that's the case, dried peppers thicken up sauces despite if they are thin walled or not. Thai chiles make a really good sauce imo. I use thai dragons, which are on the hotter end. However, I'd suggest trying a thai pepper that isn't as hot for your friends. They are so thin they will dry on the plant if you let them. I just put em in half vinegar and half water, then I put two limes in the mix and cook them before purée them. I am able to make the sauce thicker than I want so I can add water and vinegar to get the right consistency while purée them. A lot of people liked the thai flavor. The plants are prolific and seem to be the easiest ones I've grown. They are so easy I have an area that only gets partial sun where I put them due to lack of room. They still do well enough to give me lots of chiles.