Thanks! I guess I will try and find some lava soap.Lucky Dog Hot Sauce said:ice cold gin provides some relief - for one, it's cool and slippery. For another it's alcohol, which will absorb some of the capcaisin oil.Â
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Soapy milk is also effective.Â
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Lava soap is probably the best option though - it's a bit rough, but it's a degreaser and that's pretty much what you need.
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And for the love of god, don't scratch your nuts.
ÂDrUnK said:And too late about the nuts...
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Unless it's Lance Armstrong.Lucky Dog Hot Sauce said:Â
Seems like that should beÂ
ÂRainingLemur said:Unless it's Lance Armstrong.
ÂDrUnK said:And too late about the nuts...
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ÂHawaiianero said:I like the ice cold gin answer, add some tonic water and a few pickled peppers and drink until you pass out. I found nothing really works fully and have gone all night and most of the next day before it stopped burning. The dumass part for me is it's happened more than once.
I need either to wear long sleeve shirts  or longer gloves. It's my wrist that always seem to be getting burned.Lucky Dog Hot Sauce said:Â
I share your dumnbassness, as I have also done this more than once.Â
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The worst was when I had to de-stem 50 lbs of Morugas. I wore gloves, respirator, hairnet, etc - forgot to wear a long sleeve shirt. My forearms felt like they'd spent 3 days on the surface of the sun for about 48 hours. It was not a pleasant feeling.Â
Double or tripple gloves. And I find that nitrile gloves are much better than latex gloves at sealing out the capsaicin.juanitos said:Â
gloves are really the only thing that works for me