#FREEJACK #NEVERFORGET
NoFraud Online Poker Room: http://nofraud.pokerfraudalert.com:8087. For password resets and reload requests PM me.
Hot spicy foods can trick your body into thinking your head temperature is too high, causing your head (and face) to sweat to cool it off. This notion was actually tested to be dietary strategy to regulate body temperature in hotter climates, with researchers at the University of Arizona publishing a peer reviewed scholarly paper on the matter a number of years ago. Strange but true. That's why it's no coincidence that the hottest peppers are cultivated in the hottest biomes.
Apparently - and I did just look this up - it turns out that Mumbles is a colossal fucktard.
#FREEJACK #NEVERFORGET
NoFraud Online Poker Room: http://nofraud.pokerfraudalert.com:8087. For password resets and reload requests PM me.
Dude, your user name should be "SrslyAssumingShit", because I knew about that matter from the late 1990s. I was in grad school in the Southwest back then, a U of Arizona graduate, and a trivia junky about such things for decades. So that story was of interest to me for lulz, and the personal connection seeing as the work was published by someone at my alma mater.
So, fuck the hell off with the "he just googled that 5 mins ago" shit. You don't know what the fuck what you're talking about in that matter.
Something similar works with hot drinks, hence no one has ever said it's not cold enough to drink coffee/tea.
The gloves thing is prolly just so after you're done playing with peppers you don't blind yourself by touching your eyes or brow. Esp dried spices stick to the tip your fingers for hours. With really hot spices you only need nominal traces to somewhat forcibly shut your eye close for a good while.
Agree that the gloves are most likely so you don't get it in your eye later.
My mom has a major aversion to anything even slightly spicy.
Fortunately I didn't inherit that, though once something is super spicy to the point where I want to immediately reach for the water after swallowing each bite, it kinda kills the enjoyment of it.
It's always tough to explain to restaurants when something is listed as "spicy" that I like spicy, but not super-spicy, so I ask just how spicy they mean. The second I say anything, they immediately want to default to something super mild, which I don't want either.
The glove thing is fairly simple. The oils in hot peppers are skin irritants, and being oil, won't always wash off so easily. Yeah it can fuck up your eyes, but its bad enough even if it only fucks with your hands. Once your fingers start burning, its hard as fuck to get them to stop. Lasts for hours.
Happened to me once, will never ever happen again. Was those goddamn haberneros. Fuck those things.
I have made chili like 20 times for guests over the past 5 years so I know what I am talking about. You should always make chili mild or medium for guests. To make it overly spicy or hot is doing a total disservice to your guests. Maybe 2 outta 10 like it hot. The rest are going to take a few bites and put it down if its too spicy/hot.
The correct thing to do is make it mild to medium. Those that like it burning hot can dress it up with spices you leave on the table.
Like I said, I have made chili for guests like 20 times so I know what I am talking about.
HE KNOWS WHAT HE IS TALKING ABOUT
Anyone up for a little Russian Roulette, pizza style?
https://m.huffpost.com/us/entry/1341326
Worked with a guy who was tasked with cleaning up a burst can of bear spray in his toolbox. He didn't wear the rubber gloves & then had to take a piss shortly after starting.
(•_•) ..
∫\ \___( •_•)
_∫∫ _∫∫ɯ \ \
Originally Posted by Hockey Guy
Whole milk is a good eyewash for peppers, as the fat in the milk helps to pick up the fat-soluable capceisin(sp?). Learn that trick working in a kitchen in a Tex-Mex steakhouse while in college. Thought my eyeballs would burn out, water wasn't during anything. The barely-English-speaking Mexican lady who made the house chili from scratch saved my eyeballs that day with a few glasses of milk poured into my eyes. Or at least it felt that way. And I was wearing gloves handling rhe dried chili pepper pods, but I must have transfers some of chili dust onto my hands by how I handled the gloves after taking them off.
There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)