Dear Rajen kokaidew,

It gives me immense pleasure to go through your thoughtful
comment.Thanksfor the
rejoinder.You have raised two important questions:1) correct Assamese
spelling of this pepper which should matter the least and 2) how " a
daughter plant can produce stronger capsicum than the mother plant" ,if
chili peppers are not native to India.

As to the name,I was dumb-founded by the statement made by some members of
our community here in the US,in which they took offense at the failure of
the reporters of not doing proper home work before using the name of
the particular pepper in question as bhut jolokia rather than its supposedly
correct moniker " bhot jolokia." I have a few things to say .First,should we
not set our own house in order  before accusing anyone else ? One Leena
Saikia,managing director of Frontal Agritech of Assam, which produces this
jolokia in abundance for commercial purposes, refers them as bhut
jolokia.She said that the bhut jolokia is sometime spelt as bhwt or bhot
jolokia.Secondly,in spite of my pointing out the fact that the word 'bhut',
perhaps, is used metaphorically---an expression that uses language in a
non-literal way,they tried to conduct a basic course to teach me Assamese
grammer as if I am an African!!!!.Thirdly,if the names like bih
jolokia,borbih jolokia and Naga jolokia are not considered belittling,in
what sense then is the term ' bhut jolokia' derogatory ?

Returning to your second question,it could be very possible that optimized
nutrition and environmental conditions could yield higher Scoville heat
units.Pods,for example, from the same seed stock may deliver less capsaicin
in rainy climatic condition.Moreover,a mix of genetically different species
may give rise to a brand new variety of chilli pepper.You are right,we will
have to dig a bit more to find out whether or not the chilli pepper is
indigenous to India .

Kamal


On 7/1/07, Rajen & Ajanta Barua <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

 Dear Kamal Bhaiti:
Nice to see your letter and the question.
The following facts may be noted for the the test of Capseforeican content
of Chilli and the position of the Assamese Bhut jolokia which is not only
the hotest but seems to be 3 times hotter compared to its next competitor,
the Jamaican Habanero.  If this is the case, I am not too much worried about
the correct Assamese spelling of the name but I have the serious
question regarding whether Chilli Pepper is really not indegenious to Asia
and whether it was in fact originally brought to India, China and all these
Asian countries only four hundred ye:ars ago as cliamed by the food
historians. We should ask the world food scientists to explain how a
daughter plant can produce stronger capsican than the mother plant?  I
think, we Assamese should go a one step further and set up our own research
to find out the thruth.
Rajen Kokaidew
-----------------------------------------------------

*Scoville Heat Unit content of: *
  Assamese *bhut jolokia*: 1,001,000 Jamaican "Scotch bonnet" *habanero*:
300,000 Thai *prik*: 100,000 Ethiopian *ber-beri*: 50,000 Mexican *
jalapeno*: 10,000 New Mexican green pepper: 1,000

*What They Mean:*

The 95-year-old measurement of chile pepper heat, known as the Scoville
Heat Unit for its inventor Parke Davis chemist Wilbur Scoville, measures a
pepper's content of capsaicin, the substance which gives peppers their fire.
One molecule of capsaicin in about 16 million molecules of water gets a
rating of one: thus an apple or a glass of water has zero Scoville Units,
pure capsaicin registers 16 million, and the pepper sprays commercially sold
to repel muggers and bears come in at 2 million.

Ratings for edible chile peppers vary, since soil and rain can affect
capsaicin contents. But most authorities place the green and red peppers
which give spice and tang to New Mexican cooking in a range from 800 to
1,500 Scoville Heat Units. Mexico's *jalapenos* are a bit hotter at 5,000
to 10,000; Ethiopia's *ber-beri* come in at 50,000; and Thailand's thin
little *prik* peppers 50,000 to 100,000. Until recently, Jamaica's Scotch
Bonnet version of the *habanero* held the record, with a range of 80,000
to 300,000 units. Last September, however, the Chile Pepper Institute at New
Mexico State University -- the universally acknowledged arbiter of pepper
heat -- dethroned the *habanero* in favor of Assam's *bhut jolokia,* whose
1 million Scoville Units compare pretty well to the two-million unit pepper
spray sold as a repellent for muggers and bears.

The geographical and chemical variety of peppers, in botanical terms, is
new. Until the 1500s, chiles grew nowhere but Latin America. Bred from a
wild source by Mexican farmers about 8,000 years ago, they arrived in Europe
and then Africa after Columbus' second expedition in 1493, and crossed the
Pacific 20 years later in the other direction. (From Mexico by Spanish and
Portuguese boats to the Philippines, then mainland Southeast Asia, India,
and China.) Thus the traditional cuisines of Sichuan, Goa, Addis, and Laos
are much hotter than they used to be; earlier Asian and African admirers of
fiery foods made do with Indian-grown black pepper, ginger, mustard, and so
on. Worldwide production totals 25 million tons, with China the largest
grower by weight. Mexico, the original homeland, is in second place,
followed by Turkey, Indonesia, Spain, the United States and Nigeria. No list
of production by capsaicin content seems available, but presumably India and
Thailand would be near the top, and Jamaica might lead on a per capita
basis. If there is a lesson here, it might be as follows: "globalization" is
older than many believe, and as time passes it gets adapted to local taste.



 ----- Original Message -----
*From:* kamal deka <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
*To:* [email protected]
*Sent:* Saturday, June 30, 2007 5:50 PM
*Subject:* [Assam] A letter to the Editor


  The following letter got published in today's edition of The
Sentinel.Any comments?
KJD
 **
**
**
*Of Asomiya Chilli Pepper*
It is said that chilli pepper is not indigenous to India. Although
domesticated in Mexico in 7000 BC and introduced to India by the Portuguese
only about 400 years ago, an Asomiya chilli pepper is the new champion in
the world of heat. The ultra-hot bih jolokia or bhut jolokia of Asom has
recently made headlines for its deadliest punch, and the Guinness World
Records Ltd has certified them as the hottest of all species, displacing Red
Savina of California. The bhut jolokia is now officially the world's hottest
pepper, rated at an inferno of 1,001,304 Scioville heat units, which are
used to rate the pungency level of pepper. In fact, these blistering hot
Asomiya chillies have recently figured in the prestigious Time magazine for
being the world's hottest chillies.
I am nonplussed by the multitude of names of this pepper, used by the
local people differently at different places. They bear monikers such as
bhut jolokia, bih jolokia, borbih jolokia, Naga jolokia and kordoi-siria
jolokia. Moreover, bhut jolokia is also spelt as bhwt or bhot jolokia. What
is the deal with these different names that one can read in print and on the
Internet these days for supposedly the very same chilli variety? Are these
chillies the same but named differently at different places? Are the names
bhut jolokia and bhot jolokia interchangeable?
It is possible that bhut jolokia is so named owing to its ghostly bite or
introduction by the Bhutias from Bhutan. Can any reader of your esteemed
daily enlighten us as to why bhut jolokia is also known as bhwt or bhot
jolokia? A few members of the Asomiya diaspora here in the US are of the
opinion that the moniker ''bhot'' stemmed from an Asomiya tribe and find the
name bhut jolokia very derogatory.
It will not be out of order to mention here that if one happens to bite
into a particular hot specimen, he or she should not gulp a glass of water
to douse the fire — it will make matters worse as the capsaicin oil in the
chillies and water do not mix. Yogurt or milk will give one the needed
relief.
Kamaljit Deka,
Sugarland, Texas.

------------------------------

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