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Making Bean & Beer Chili With The World’s Hottest Pepper



My hands are still burning…

If you’re new here, my name is Xtine. I’m a food writer and lifelong vegetarian living in New York City. I like sharing recipes here on the world wide interweb—sometimes they are old favorites, sometimes they are brand new, and sometimes they are fails.

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12 Comments

  1. 0:51 I really liked the joke right here, that is what I would have added to the video if I made it and the foreseeable outcome was… spicy. And I say that without having seen the ending of the joke yet. lol.
    5:27 Funny to see you nearly sneeze… and then a guy sneezes in the background instead, multiple times too, lol.
    In the end I have to say, it was worth watching this video. It was informative and fun at the same time!

  2. Chili is one of my favorite foods! This one looks really yummy but I think it would be too spicy for me

  3. Pepper X is the worlds hottest pepper btw, its 2-3 times at hot as the sweet scorpion

  4. When it comes to these nuclear peppers, I have learned that they do worse damage to your fingers than your mouth. Years ago I finely cut up a couple of ghost peppers, not wearing any gloves because it seemed ridiculous to me. I paid a terrible price hours later in the evening. I had a few bottles of hard liquor in my freezer and I used them to cool my fingers as it was getting properly painful.

    In the food itself however I find them to be surprisingly harmless. Anything finely cut that simmers in a stew-like dish for longer than half an hour seems to mellow out. I haven't always found this to be true with the dried powder of these. Peppers are weird. They always add that level volatility to whatever you cook.

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