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To dilute the heat in one bottle of Blair’s After Death,
you would need over 3,000 units of water to dilute the heat to the point
where the average human tongue could no longer feel it.
The hotter the chile of the sauce, the greater the amount
of water required to dilute it becomes. The Scoville Organoleptic Test is
still used, however it has mostly been replaced by a process called high
performance liquid chromatography. This process converts measurements of
capsaicin from the standard parts per million to the more popular Scoville
Units.
Surprisingly, the bell pepper is used as a baseline for
the Scoville Unit rating. The bell pepper essentially has a rating of zero
Scoville Units, thus it acts as the lowest level of heat on the Scoville
scale.
On the other end of the scale is the Habanero pepper. At
over 300,000 Scoville Units, the Habanero certainly sets the limit as the
hottest pepper. The “Red Savina,” the hottest strain of the Habanero, has
been measured as around 577,000 Scoville Units. Pure capsaicin stacks up at
16 million Scoville Units!!!
Who is Wilbur Scoville?
A brief timeline of the man behind the heat scale
To chileheads and hot sauce lovers, he is the man behind
the heat scale. Wilbur Scoville was born in 1865. In 1912 while working for
the Parke Davis pharmaceutical company he developed the Scoville
Organoleptic Test. In 1922, Scoville won the Ebert prize from the American
Pharmaceutical Association and in 1929 he received the Remington Honor
Medal. Scoville also received an honorary Doctor of Science from Columbia
University.
Scoville wrote The Art of Compounding which was first
published in 1895 and has gone through at least 8 editions. The book was
used as a pharmacological reference until the 1960’s. Scoville also wrote
Extract & Perfumes which contained hundreds of formulations -- after all
Scoville had a knack for compounding. Scoville died in 1942 but his name
will forever go on with the Scoville Heat Unit and in the lives of chili
lovers everywhere.
About The Author
I own and operat. We're a
growing company that specializes in hard to find hot sauces and fiery foods.
Article Source :
www.womenbrands.com
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