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duaneb
on Oct 24, 2016
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Can you hurt yourself eating chilli peppers?
To my understanding, capsaicin is in the flesh around the seeds, but the seeds themselves are not spicy and tend to add sweetness. Is that correct?
markdown
on Oct 25, 2016
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I too have read that, but my experience is completely different. Nothing burns like the seeds.
mindcrime
on Oct 25, 2016
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That jibes with my experience. Leaving the seeds in seems to create a hotter dish.
dragonwriter
on Oct 25, 2016
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AFAIK, the seeds tens to be coated in the oils from the surrounding flesh and bring heat for that reason, but less than the ribs themselves. I don't think there is heat
in
the seeds, but that's something of an academic distinction in most cases.
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