The Guardian (USA)

Hot stuff: Pepper X is named world’s spiciest by Guinness World Records

- Erum Salam

A new pepper is coming in hot as the spiciest in the world, Guinness World Records has announced.

For a decade, the Carolina Reaper chilli pepper was ruled to be the hottest chilli pepper in the world. But now “Pepper X” has taken its crown.

The spiciness of a pepper is measured on what is known as the Scoville scale, which was establishe­d by the pharmacist Wilbur Scoville in 1912. The scale measures the concentrat­ion of capsaicin, the primary component of a pepper that makes it spicy.

Capsaicin “causes a burning sensation when it makes contact with human tissue”, according to Guinness World Records.

Pepper X measures 2.69m heat units on the Scoville scale. That beats the Carolina Reaper chilli pepper by over 1m units, laboratory tests conducted at South Carolina’s Winthrop University in August showed.

Both Pepper X and the Carolina Reaper were created by the renowned pepper breeder appropriat­ely named Ed Currie. The man whose last name is phonetical­ly identical to the often spicy dish called Pepper X’s new title “a team effort”.

In order to create Pepper X, Currie crossbred the Carolina Reaper with a pepper his friend sent him from Michigan that was “brutally hot”.

Only five people – including Currie – had tasted Pepper X when its recordbrea­king status was announced on Monday.

Pepper X was revealed in the popular YouTube show Hot Ones. The show’s creator and host Sean Evans tries chicken wings of varying heat levels with celebrity guests such as the actor Jennifer Lawrence, the chef Gordon Ramsay, the singer Billie Eilish, the basketball champion Shaquille O’Neal and the musician Dave Grohl.

“When we bred this pepper out, first thing we looked for is something to raise that heat level to what we thought was going to be the maximum, and the second thing was flavor,” Currie told Evans on the show.

Consumers will be able to test Pepper X exclusivel­y in the form of commercial­ly sold hot sauce.

Due to past experience, Currie intends to protect Pepper X more fiercely under his intellectu­al property. Therefore, he will not publicly release the pods and seeds of Pepper X.

“People have been trying to steal [the Carolina Reaper pepper] for the last 10 years,” Currie said. “There are also some high corporatio­ns who want to take what’s not theirs, and they’re willing to pay other people to do it.

“We have to protect ourselves. This is our pepper and we are going to take the world out with it.”

Currie said he still felt the heat of the pepper more than three hours later and it left him with “horrible cramps”. Despite this, he said his pain was not in vain.

“All the time and effort that we put in at the farm to make sure this got stabilized and became the hottest pepper in the world is now validated,” Curried said when awarded the record for hottest pepper. “I can’t tell you how excited I am right now.”

 ?? Jeffrey Collins/AP ?? Ed Currie holds up his certificat­ion that his new Pepper X variety of peppers is the hottest in the world according to the Guinness Book of World Records. Photograph:
Jeffrey Collins/AP Ed Currie holds up his certificat­ion that his new Pepper X variety of peppers is the hottest in the world according to the Guinness Book of World Records. Photograph:
 ?? ?? Ed Currie holds up one of his Pepper X peppers in Fort Mill, South Carolina. Photograph: Jeffrey Collins/AP
Ed Currie holds up one of his Pepper X peppers in Fort Mill, South Carolina. Photograph: Jeffrey Collins/AP

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