The Zimbabwe Independent

Do colder or warmer places eat more spicy or bland food?

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TRENDLINES don’t lie. As the chart shows, in warmer countries, people eat spicier food. Conversely, the colder the climate, the fewer spicy ingredient­s in your cuisine. There are, of course, outliers and other exceptions (and we will get to those). But the three-pepper question is: Why do dishes in hotter climates use more spices?

That’s the topic of an article published in Nature in February 2021. By examining 33 750 recipes from 70 national and regional cuisines containing a total of 93 different spices, researcher­s wanted to test the oft-posited hypothesis that spicy food in hot countries is an adaptation to increased risk of foodborne diseases. They were unable to prove the hypothesis, citing the difficulty to interpret correlatio­ns between culture and environmen­t.

“Variation in spice use is not explained by temperatur­e and … spice use cannot be accounted for by diversity of cultures, plants, crops or naturally occurring spices,” the researcher­s wrote in the article’s abstract.

“Patterns of spice use are not consistent with an infection-mitigation mechanism, but are part of a broader associatio­n between spice, health and poverty.”

The researcher­s suggest other explanatio­ns for why people in hot countries tend to eat spicier food. One possibilit­y is that it’s because spices help preserve food in hot climates. Another is that people in hot countries have developed a taste for spicy food because it helps them cool down.

Whatever the reason, the correlatio­n does exist. Looking at the graph, we see that countries and regions with a higher mean annual temperatur­e (in °C, on the x-axis) tend to use more spices (mean number of spice ingredient­s per recipe, on the y-axis).

Some of the world’s spiciest food comes from countries with the hottest climates: Indonesia and Thailand, the Caribbean and Kenya, and several Indian states, including Punjab, Rajasthan and Gujarat. These places cluster together in the upper right corner of the graph. One country outdoes all of them: Ethiopia, spicier by far, despite having a slightly lower average temperatur­e than all of them.

How do left?

If you want to know just how spicy Ethiopian cooking can get, try some doro wat, a fragrant, slow-cooked chicken stew that one reviewer describes as, “Very spicy. Super spicy. Like I-don’t-know-how-ethiopians­have-any-taste-buds-left spicy.”

On the other hand, some very hot countries are considerab­ly less spicy: The Philippine­s is in the same spiciness league as Hungary, and Ghana is as spice-poor as the

Ethiopians have any tastebuds

United Kingdom.

Cuisines of the East Asian mainland show a remarkable consistenc­y in spice use — between two and four spice ingredient­s per recipe — and this whether they have a relatively cold climate (like the Chinese provinces of Xinjiang or Shanxi) or a hotter one (such as the Yue and Hong Kong cuisines from southern China).

The least spicy recipes are from Japan, with those from Hokkaido barely managing one spice ingredient per recipe, which is still a higher average than the dishes from Kyushu, Shikoku and other regions of the country.

Europe is a bit all over the place. The Scandinavi­an countries cluster affirmingl­y around the trendline. Poland and Italy, both warmer and spicier, are exactly on the line. Recipes in France and German-speaking Europe (DACH combines the country codes for Germany, Austria and Switzerlan­d) are as spiceless as British ones.

Portugal is the spiciest European country in the graph, almost on par with the United States. A distinctio­n is made between recipes from the northern and southern US, but at least in terms of spice ingredient­s, there is hardly a difference.

On the climate/spiciness spectrum, the American South occupies a position that is virtually identical to Lebanon and Iran.

Indian food is generally very spicy (no surprises there), but there is considerab­le variation between the cuisines. Cooking in the Jain tradition is the least spicy, roughly on par with Greek food. Bengal and Gujarati dishes are about as spicy as Portuguese and American food.

The spiciest Indian food comes from Rajasthan, Punjab, and especially the Mughlai, a region in northern India where the Mughal Empire left a strong cultural legacy, also in the kitchen.

While the graph is doubtlessl­y well researched, it should come with two caveats. First, “spicy” and “hot,” while colloquial­ly used as synonyms, don’t entirely overlap. There are also spices that are sweet (eg vanilla), savoury (such as coriander), or citrusy (like ginger).

And second, it overlooks the evolving palates of the modern world.

Take chicken tikka masala, often cited as modern Britain’s national dish. It was invented in Britain (probably in the 1970s, in either London or Glasgow, by Pakistani or Bangladesh­i chefs). Although milder than genuine sub-continenta­l dishes, your average chicken tikka masala is still spicier than a full English breakfast, fish and chips, and other more traditiona­l British fare. — Atlas Obscura.

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Ethiopia,
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Japan and Norway, both located Indonesia have the most spice. in the north, are the least spicy, while Ethiopia, India and

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