If mayo is too spicy for you, gulag. If you eat ghost peppers because you want to feel pain, also gulag. All food shall be of average to moderately spiciness according to the opinion of a middle aged man from India. Seriously fuck chicken wing places that dab inedible hot sauce on the corpse of animal that died to be food that’s barely edible. White people, I fucking hate them.

  • AlicePraxis [any]
    link
    fedilink
    English
    151 year ago

    at a certain point it just becomes a dick-measuring contest. a lot of insecure guys feel the need to prove how tough they are, but is anyone really impressed?

  • Barx [none/use name]
    link
    fedilink
    English
    6
    edit-2
    1 year ago

    Occasionally there are some foods where going real hot is great, like many Hunan dishes. Or a Szechuan dish where you’d be fairly unhappy with the spice level if it weren’t balanced with numbing peppercorns and sugar. Or getting right up to the edge with a good habanero sauce to pair with Mexican food. I’ve also gotta admit that I like to eat a lot of hot mirchi bajjis in a row.

    But most of the time, 100% agree. Spicy food should have flavors aside from pain. A lot of people (kkkrackers) screw it up.

  • Lawn_and_disorder [he/him]
    link
    fedilink
    English
    61 year ago

    Well, how much is to much is very individual. Also if you frequently eat spicy food you build up a tolerance. I like it resonably hot, but what that is to me have moved several 100 k scoville over the years

  • Hello_Kitty_enjoyer [none/use name]
    link
    fedilink
    English
    8
    edit-2
    1 year ago

    either can’t stomach gochugaru or spends their lives trying to breed something that approaches pure capsaicin

    they really dooby like this doe

    just use tabasco sauce and leave it at that

    • Huldra [they/them, it/its]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      61 year ago

      Regular tabasco is pretty vile though, at least go for the chipotle variant, that stuff can actually be eaten as a condiment.

      • Hello_Kitty_enjoyer [none/use name]
        link
        fedilink
        English
        2
        edit-2
        1 year ago

        true, it’s the other tabasco flavors that taste good

        mild green pepper is good too. very mild for those who cannot take hotter (I’m not pandering)

  • Tankiedesantski [he/him]
    link
    fedilink
    English
    211 year ago

    Seriously fuck chicken wing places that dab inedible hot sauce on the corpse of animal that died to be food that’s barely edible.

    It’s the spicy food equivalent of dumping a jug of high fructose corn syrup on a cake and declaring that you’ve made the cake better. T

    he only thing funnier are the places that talk up how dangerously hot their food is (I had one pizza place ask me to sign a waiver before they would let me order the hottest pizza) and then it’s only middlingly hot by Sichuan/Thai/Indian/Mexican standards.

    • CloutAtlas [he/him]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      91 year ago

      A lot of westerners don’t understand that umami and heat pair extremely well. It should be taught in any and every culinary school on the planet. Salt and pepper go together, umami and heat go together. Hot and sour is good, and I think that’s generally the school of thought in the Americas is for hot sauces (Cholula, Tabasco, Frank’s Red Hot, buffalo sauce in general, Tapatio). Don’t get me wrong, vinegar and/or citrus does improve the flavour better than just straight up heat like an edgelord, and I do really like vinegar based hot sauces. But MSG/Mushrooms/etc that’s savoury? Not nearly as well understood.

      I distinctly remember making a spicy mapo dofu for some white people and the consensus was “oh, that’s a nice level of spice, it’s very hot but not too hot!”

      It was MSG. In fact I didn’t put table salt in the dish, all the sodium in the entire dish was msg and soy sauce. I bought the chili peppers from the same place as anyone else, Woolworths. I didn’t have a magically less spicy but still spicy strain, I simply complimented the heat with other flavours.

    • liberaldeathsquads [they/them]OP
      link
      fedilink
      English
      13
      edit-2
      1 year ago

      Perhaps, but people should be engaging in things the way I do it, the right way, the way I learned from my favorite content creators.

    • liberaldeathsquads [they/them]OP
      link
      fedilink
      English
      51 year ago

      A centrist eats hot cheetos, a nazi eats extra bland for white people mayo, the ultraleft eats you will fucking die by eating this sauce, the traditional marxist orthodox we should all strive to be is literally just normal Indian food, far above a cumskin’s caspian tolerance, some wholesome lentil soup for the soul that will burn the white demon inside every cracker to death while every civilized person finds it delectable!

    • CloutAtlas [he/him]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      51 year ago

      Me putting Sichuan peppercorns in 1 dish for a friend:

      “I think something’s wrong, my mouth is numb!?”

      Said person is white, Australian and “enjoys spices” (He had 5 spice, cinammon, pepper and paprika in his spice rack + a bottle of sriracha in the fridge for some reason)

  • CliffordBigRedDog [he/him]
    link
    fedilink
    English
    9
    edit-2
    1 year ago

    spice like all flavoured food is a treat and therefore reactionary

    true revolutionaries subsist themselves by IV drips using abandoned needles from hospitals

    go ahead and enjoy your ghost pepper flavoured bugs you PMC bourgeois DSA swine

    • supafuzz [comrade/them]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      31 year ago

      “The food of the true revolutionary is the red pepper, and he who cannot endure red peppers is also unable to fight.”