AP Photo/Courtesy of Jim Duffy, New Mexico State University
"You take a bite. It doesn't seem so bad, and then it builds and it builds and it builds. So it is quite nasty," Paul Bosland, director of the New Mexico State University's Chile Pepper Institute and known as the "Chileman," told the Associated Press.
The chart used to determine the pepper's heat, named the Scoville Scale after its creator, American pharmacist Wilbur Scoville, assigns measurable units of spiciness to various foods. For example, the Trinidad Scorpion gets a whopping 1.4 million scoville units (SCU), while jalapeño peppers range from 2,500 to 8,000.
Scoville ratings are determined by the Scoville organoleptic test. The capsaicin oil (the spicy part) of a pepper is extracted and then incrementally diluted with sugar-water until a panel of five testers can no longer taste the spiciness.
Of course, this method opens up the Scoville
Today, some spice-experts tout a more scientific process, called high-performance liquid chromatography which separates chemicals based on absorption. But the Scoville Scale is still the official measurement, used by foodies and the New Mexico State University Chili Pepper Institute alike.
See how your favorite peppers rank:
Mike Nudelman/Business Insider