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Conference turris::cooks

Title:How to Make them Goodies
Notice:Please Don't Start New Notes for Old Topics! Check 5.*
Moderator:FUTURE::DDESMAISONSec.com::winalski
Created:Wed Feb 19 1986
Last Modified:Thu Jun 05 1997
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:4127
Total number of notes:31160

12.0. "Chiles" by BRUTUS::SANDERS () Thu Jun 21 1984 22:24

	The following is an article explaining some of the history and
	background of Chile.  Be forewarned,  it is a bit long and slightly
	biased.  Good cooking!

	Bob

                               A FEW HOT FACTS

                                By John Crenshaw

                To my knowledge, no one has ever died from an overdose
         of    8-Methyl-N-vanilly-6-noneamide,   although    countless
         thousands have known symptoms of gastronomic flashbacks.

                The substance may be  addictive; although there are no
         severe  withdrawl  symptoms,  its  prolonged  absence  leaves
         regular users with a vague,  empty feeling located nearer the
         soul than other,  more definable areas of  the physical body.
         The  substance, becomes  more symbolic  than curative,  stirs
         memories  and  longing:  old  friends  and  red  wine,  close
         families at  dinner, fields of  deep green wetted by  the Rio
         Grande's muddy waters.

                Simply put, it's homesickness, a yearning focused on a
         particular  chemical that  for many  is  a way  of life.   The
         sufferer is  likely a  displaced New  Mexican, victim  of the
         Capsaicin Withdrawal Blues.

                Not one of them would tell you he's aching for a taste
         of home and 8-Methyl-N-vanillyl-6-nonenamide -- or even for a
         dash  of Capsaicin,  the name  given that  unwieldly chemical
         designation.  They  would tell  you, instead, that  they have
         found not  one, not  one decent  restaurant anywhere  in town
         (this could be  in a city of millions), that  they can't find
         an enchilada anywhere, that if they  ask for chile they get a
         red, soupy  concoction of meat  and something, that  the best
         taco stand around offers Tabasco for a sauce.  And it's chile
         they want --  green chile or red chile, but  chile.  The pod,
         not the soup.  Chile with  flavor, not just heat.  New Mexico
         chile.

               Capsaicin, or an isomer thereof, is that oily, orangish
         acid layered along the seeds and  veins of the chile pod, one
         of   New   Mexico's   officially   adopted   state   symbols.
         Capsaicin,  then, makes  chile chile,  gives it  the piquancy
         ranging  from innocuous  to incendiary,  brings tears  to the
         eater's eyes, blisters to his lips,  fire to his belly -- and
         joy to his heart.

                Chile, spicy,  flavorful, unique,  is indeed  a symbol
         specific to the heart of the Southwest and a fitting catalyst
         for that ancient disease of the displaced.

                The  fame   and  success  of  New   Mexico's  co-state
         vegetable  (the other  being the  pinto bean)  may be  due in
         large part to one man.

                Dr.   Roy  Minoru Nakayama  may  well  be the  world's
         foremost authority on chiles.   His doctoral dissertation was
         done on chile diseases.

                A   professor  in   New   Mexico  State   University's
         horticulture department, Dr.  Nakayama comes by his interest
         naturally.  He was born to it.

                Son of a  farmer in the village of Dona  Ana, near Los
         Cruces, he -- as do the  sons of farmers everywhere -- worked
         in the fields -- including the chile fields.

                He thinks chile is better -- certainly more popular --
         than it was when he picked it as a lad.

                "The big  difference, actually, way back  then -- even
         just  prior  to 1955  --  was  that  about the  only  variety
         available here  was a  real hot chile.   Too doggone  hot for
         most," he  says.  "Most of it  was a native chile,  with some
         New Mexico  No.  9.   That No.  9  was larger-bodied,  but it
         was too hot.  We couldn't sell it outside the state."

                A landmark  year, 1955:  New  Mexico No.  6  came into
         production, a production that  slowly increased as New Mexico
         farmers could sell their crop  outside the state, catering to
         the milder tastes of Midwestners.

                Another landmark  year, 1974:  The Numex  Big Jim goes
         into commercial production, end result of a decade's research
         and  hybridization  that  saw Dr.   Nakayama  and  associates
         borrow pollen  from a  tiny Peruvian  variety, cross  it with
         Anaheim, native Chimayo and  other New Mexican varieties, and
         plant, water, wait, weigh, and taste.  It takes anywhere from
         about seven to ten or more years before you get results.

                The Numex Big  Jim, named in honor  of Dr.  Nakayama's
         home state  and Jim Lytle,  a Los Cruces-area farmer  who has
         worked closely  in these  experiments, produces pods  about a
         foot long  and weighing  maybe three to  a pound.   It's bred
         so that the pods  mature concurrently, making machine picking
         -- and thus greater acreage -- possible.  Its size and weight
         surpassed other popular varieties.  The heat of the Numex Big
         Jim (rated on a scale that  has Anaheim and New Mexico No.  6
         as 1, Tabasco at 8) scales at 3.

                Dr. Nakayama is modestly proud of his accomplishment.

                "It has a  different make-up from any  other chile," he
         says.

                "I haven't found any chile that's any better than what
         we have  here.  In fact, in  some areas, frankly, I  feel that
         some of the chiles just don't  have the flavor of these grown
         in New Mexico."

                He himself  prefers milder chile, but  is often called
         upon to judge  in chile cookoffs and  other such catastrophes.
         An ulcer,  legacy of a  German Prisoner-of-war camp,  must be
         placated with antacids before he renders taste and judgment.

                "I used to like the real  hot one, but it didn't quite
         agree with me,"  he confides.  "So now I eat  the milder ones
         -- hot enough to let me know I'm eating chile."


                               The Nakayama Scale


                        !!!!!!!!!!      10. Bahamian
                         !!!!!!!!!       9. Santaca (Japanese)
                          !!!!!!!!       8. Tabasco
                           !!!!!!!       7. Jalapeno
                            !!!!!!       6. Espanola and Cayenne
                             !!!!!       5. Sandia
                              !!!!       4. Hot Ancho
                               !!!       3. Numex Big Jim
                                !!       2. Rio Grande
                                 !       1. New Mexico No. 6 and
                                            Anaheim

                - Excerpted from New Mexico Magazine's publication,
                  The Best from New Mexico Kitchens.
T.RTitleUserPersonal
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12.1More on benefits of hot chili peppers ...OCTAVE::VIGNEAULTWed Feb 05 1992 12:41165
	Here's some of the info on chili peppers that I'd promised to 
	enter.  This is excerpted from the book "The Food Pharmacy", by
	Jean Carper.  These findings are based on present medical research
	being carried out on various foods.  Therefore, at the present, the
	results are not necessarily conclusive, but based upon what is known
	from the results of experimentation.

	It's fairly long, and perhaps I got carried away, but I hope you
	find it interesting.

	Regards, Larry

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

	Possible therapeutic benefits:

	- Excellent medicine for the lungs
	- Acts as an expectorant
	- Prevents and alleviates chronic bronchitis and emphysema
	- Acts as a decongestant
	- Helps dissolve blod clots
	- Kills pain
	- Induces euphoria

        How much ?  Ten to twenty drops of red hot chili sauce in a glass
	of water daily or a hot spicy meal three times a week can help keep
	airways free of congestion, preventing or treating chronic bronchitis
	or colds.  Two teaspoons of jalapeno pepper can rev up the blood clot
	dissolving mechanism, protecting against heart disease and stroke.

	- Lung cleansers -

	Indeed, hot peppers may prolong life, according to Dr. Irwin Ziment,
	a pulmonary expert who prescribes chili peppers in various forms for
	his patients with chronic bronchitis and emphysema. "Sometimes the
	effects are profound," he notes.  Chili peppers and other spicy foods,
	he says, probably because of the pungent component capsaicin - the 
	stuff that burns the mouth - are expectorants just like common drugs.
	Dr. Ziment calls hot spices nature's Robitussin.

	According to Dr. Ziment, chili peppers, being an irritant in the
	stomach, automatically signal the bronchial cells to pour out fluids
	making lung and throat secretions less sticky and thick.  He is 
	convinced that eating hot chilis helps prevent the onset of chronic
	bronchitis and makes it easier to manage if it develops.

	 Indeed, in experiments in animals, Swedish researchers have found 
	that a dose of capsaicin desensitized the lungs - blocked some of the 
	swelling damage to trachea and bronchial cells and the broncho-
	constriction caused by cigarette smoke and other irritants. 

	- Painkiller - 

	Our ancestors were right to use hot pepper extract as a local
	anaesthesia for toothache and to cure conjunctivitis.  Now scientists
	have tracked the precise neurological mechanism by which the 
	capsaicin in the hot peppers suppresses pain.  Capsaicin induces a
	reduction in nerve cells of a neurotransmitter called substance P
	that relays pain sensations to the central nervous system.  Thus,
	capsaicin short-circuits the perception of pain. Scientific experiments
	confirm that applying capsaicin to the nerves drains dental pulp of
	substance P, and thus reduces pain sensation.

	- Heart Peppers -

	The Thais use capsicum chili peppers as a seasoning and as an 
	appetizer with meals; thus their blood is infused with chili pepper
	compounds several times a day. Noting that German researchers as 
	early as 1965 found chili peppers good for the blood as a fibrinolytic
	(clot-dissolving) stimulant, Thai physicians have long credited the
	regular consumption of chili peppers as a reason that thromboembolism
	(life threatening blood-clots) are rare among Thais, particularly 
	when compared with Americans. To test this theory, Sukon Visudhiphan,
	M.D., and his colleagues at the Siriraj Hospital in Bangkok made some
	rice flour noodles and fortified each 200 grams (about a cup and a 1/3)
	with two teaspoons of fresh ground capsicum jalapeno pepper. They fed 
	the hot-pepper noodles to 16 volunteers and plain noodles to 4 others.

	Decidedly, the blood-clot activity increased almost immediately in 
	eaters of the hot-pepper laced noodles; no blood changes occurred in
	those who ate the plain noodles.  However, thirty minutes after 
	eating, the clot-dissolving activity was back to normal. In later 
	experiments, the Indian investigators found far greater clot dissolving
	activity in 88 Thais compared with 55 Americans living in Thailand.
	Americans had more blood fibrinogen - the clotting substance - and
	less clot-dissolving activity, making them more susceptible to arterial
	blockage.  Further, studies in rabbits by other Indian biochemists AT
	the Central Food Technological Research Institute in Mysore found that
	both dry red pepper and pure capsaicin lowered blood cholesterol
	apparently by suppressing the liver's production of cholesterol. 

	Follow-up 1985 studies discovered that capsaicin depresses cholesterol
	and triglycerides even when fed to animals along with cholesterol
	rich food. The capsaicin overpowered the expected damaging effect of 
	the fatty foods.

	- Blocks Pain, brings pleasure -

	At the same time that chili peppers produce pain in the mouth they 
	send signals to the brain that kill pain.  If you've ever felt a 
	certain "high" after eating hot peppers, there may be a good reason
	according to Paul Rozin, a psychologist at the University of 
	Pennsylvania.  It's because the burning pain on the tongue and throat
	excites the brain to secrete endomorphin - a natural morphine - which
	blocks pain sensations and induces a kind of euphoria. Endorphins are
	the same brain chemicals credited with so-called "runner's high."

	Eventually, says Dr. Rozin, who has studied spices in Mexico and the 
	US, some people who regularly eat chili peppers "condition" themselves
	to produce the pleasurable endomorphins in higher and higher doses.
	In other words, they become addicted to the pleasure brought by the 
	excessive endomorphin.

	- Learning to like it hot -

	Start with small doses. If you want to get the medicinal benefits of 
	chili peppers but can't stand the heat, try a little at a time.
	Experts say virtually everybody can gradually build up a tolerance
	to the hot taste and learn to love it.

	- A hot bonus for the calorie conscious -

	Hot spicy foods may give you an unexpected bonus - an increased 
	metabolic rate that burns off calories faster.  It's no secret that
	certain food constituents can speed up metabolism, the process that 
	produces heat by burning off calories.  In a test with 12 volunteers,,
	British reaearchers at Oxford Polytechnic found that adding three 
	grams of hot chili sauce and three grams of ordinary yellow mustard
	(about 3/5 of a tsp of each) to a meal caused the subjects to increase
	their metabolic rate an average 25%, burning an average forty-five 
	more calories in the following three hours. One person burned up 10%
	more calories or 76 out of a 766 calorie breakfast after adding the 
	hot stuff.
	

	- Possible adverse effects -

	Ulcers ? If you don't have ulcers, there is no evidence hot peppers 
	harm the stomach, but red chili peppers may aggravate ulcers. However,
	a report in the British Medical Journal found no clinical ill effects.
	
	A group of 25 people with ulcers ate a normal diet and took a prescribed
	antacid. Another group of 25 took the antacid but added red chili
	pepper at every meal.  After a month the duodenal ulcers of 80% of both
	groups had healed equally.

        
	According to reports in medical journals, some people after eating 
	lots of hot chili peppers have a burning of the anus, specially 
	during bowel movements. It was discovered during a jalapeno pepper
	eating contest in Texas.  It even has a medical name: "jaloproctitis"
	Such hot peppers woud be ill advised for hemorrhoid sufferers.


	Cancer risk or protection ? Eating high amounts of red chili powder
	by men in India was linked in a 1987 study to higher rates of cancer
	of the oral cavity, pharynx, esophagus, and larnyx. Animals fed
	extremely high doses of red chili powder (one percent of the diet) -
	amounts far exceeding what humans could tolerate - exhibited more 
	tumors. On the other hand, says researcher Dr. Terry Lawson, University
	of Nebraska Medical Center, small doses of capsaicin actually acts as
	antioxidants to block cell damage, possibly preventing cancer. It's
	not unusual, he notes, for high doses and low doses of the same 
	chemical to have opposite effects in fighting cancer.
12.2I must be real healthyALAMOS::ADAMSVisualize Whirled PeasWed Feb 05 1992 20:488
    In an average week, I go trough a jar of Trappey's sliced jalapenos,
    4-6 green chiles, and about 5-10 Tbs or red chile powder (not that
    "Texas" chili powder stuff you find in the store :).
    
    If my friends and I get real bored (or drunk), we'll have a Habanero
    eating contest.  No one yet has been able to eat a whole hab!
    
    --- Gavin
12.3Quite a conceptSTAR::DIPIRROFri Feb 07 1992 20:082
    	So you can tell that you're hungry when your a%%hole stops burning?
    That's an interesting idea...
12.4ALAMOS::ADAMSVisualize Whirled PeasWed Feb 12 1992 21:505
    Actually,  I don't seem to have that problem.  Culturally, chile's have
    always been "big" in area's I've lived.  I'm sure it's due to the
    addicting effect related in earlier notes.
    
    --- Gavin
12.5Just another food scare?STAR::DIPIRROThu Feb 13 1992 12:033
    	I just received a flyer in the mail from my dentist which claims
    that eating spicy foods, particularly lots of hot peppers, has been
    linked to gum diseases. Anyone's teeth falling out yet?
12.6One point isn't a trend, but...MANTHN::EDDI refuse to talk to myselfThu Feb 13 1992 17:364
    ...well, I just went to the dentist Tuesday and was told my gums are
    the healthiest they've been in years.
    
    Edd
12.7Where to find the Elusive Chile Pepper?CAM2::SYKESJohn Sykes - DPSE&SD Programs - 381-2416Fri Jul 09 1993 20:116
Where, in New England, would a would_be Tex/Mex cook find chile peppers,
other than Jalopeno?  I'm looking for fresh New Mexicos, at a minimum.
Are there any good Hispanic grocers in NH or MA?

Gracias,
Juan de la Nashua
12.8Try Alfredo'sTANG::RHINEJack, OpenVMS Training Product ManagerSat Jul 10 1993 02:369
    John....Alfredo's Market on West Hollis about a block off of Main St.
    in Nashua.  (Alfredo also has real chorizo and other good stuff)
    
    East/West foods in Lamplighter Square has some chiles of various types
    that will suffice but aren't south western.
    
    Your amigo, Jack
    
    
12.9Grow 'em!STAR::DIPIRROMon Jul 12 1993 15:416
    	I got so fed up trying to find fresh chiles of various kinds that I
    started growing them a number of years back. So now I have more
    jalapenos, serranos, New Mexican, poblanos, etc. than I know what to do
    with! If you beg.....Actually, it looks like it might be a banner year
    for serranos and New Mexican chiles. So I may be talked into parting
    with some (August/September though).
12.10Request methods to use chiles?SSDEVO::MARTENSQualification Program ManagerWed Sep 28 1994 19:1412
    Okay, now that its Chile season (at least in Colorado), does anyone 
    have any ideas on how to use/serve Chiles. I already make Green Chile
    with pork, but I am looking for a easy casserole. 
    
    Any ideas????
    
    Regards,
    Bert Martens
    
    ps: I did read all notes listed in the directory that included Chile.
    	(I think)
    
12.11Using chiliesGENRAL::JORDANWed Sep 28 1994 20:019
I also would like some chili recipies.
Although I did have a casserole from the cafeteria that had layers
of chicken (cut up), green chilies, and corn tortillas. 
Unfortunately someone put a layer of GROUND BEEF! on the top layer,
which I thought was kind of strange, and then a layer of cheese. 
I might have to go up and see if I can bribe the cook behind the
grill.....

Lisa
12.12 easy chile rellenos, a family favoriteGOLLY::CARROLLthe courage of my contradictionsThu Sep 29 1994 12:3912
    I have a recipe at is an old family recipe which we call "chile relleno
    casserole".  I will try to remember to bring in the recipe but the gist
    of it is this: take a 9x9 pan, layer with green chilies, than grated
    cheddar cheese, then more chilies, then more cheese, then top with a
    batter made from beaten egg whites, folded with the yolks and some
    biscuit mix to giv souffle part some stability.  Serve hot topped with
    sour cream.
    
    My favorite variation is to at bits of chopped leftover pork chops to
    the cheese layers.
    
    D!
12.13Whole conference dedicated to the topicVMSDEV::HALLYBFish have no concept of fireThu Sep 29 1994 12:505
    Don't forget to take a peek at 2B::CHILI  (hit the SELECT key)
    
    Some good recipes, even one for vegetarian chili with pecans!
    
      John