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The pungent sensation provided by chili peppers, black pepper and other spices like ginger and horseradish plays an important role in a diverse range of cuisines across the world. Pungent substances, like capsaicin , are used in topical analgesics and pepper sprays .
Habanero peppers, pepper extract, apricot nectar (water, apricot pulp and juice, corn syrup, sugar, citric acid, ascorbic acid), mustard flour, garlic, allspice and spices (product label, The Final Answer, 2011) Products range from 119,000 to 1.5 million United States: For use as a food additive only [3] Dave's Gourmet "Insanity Sauce" (original)
Chavicine is a possibly pungent compound found in black pepper [1] and other species of the genus Piper. It is one of the four geometric isomers of piperine. In light, especially ultra-violet light, chavicine is formed from its isomer piperine. Its flavor has been reported as flavorless [2] [3] Chavicine will also re-isomerise back to piperine. [4]
Harissa – Tunisian hot chili sauce whose main ingredients are piri piri, serrano peppers and other hot chili peppers and spices such as garlic paste, coriander, red chili powder, caraway as well as some vegetable or olive oil. [54] Hawaij – name given to a variety of Yemenite ground spice mixtures used primarily for soups and coffee.
This is a list of culinary herbs and spices. Specifically these are food or drink additives of mostly botanical origin used in nutritionally insignificant quantities for flavoring or coloring. This list does not contain fictional plants such as aglaophotis, or recreational drugs such as tobacco.
This is a list of Capsicum cultivars belonging to the five major species of cultivated peppers (genus Capsicum): C. annuum, C. chinense, C. baccatum, C. frutescens, and C. pubescens. Due to the large and changing number of cultivars , and the variation of cultivar namings in different regions, this list only gives a few examples of the ...
Capsicum pubescens is a plant of the genus Capsicum (pepper). The species name, pubescens, refers to the hairy leaves of this pepper. The hairiness of the leaves, along with the black seeds, make Capsicum pubescens distinguishable from other Capsicum species. Capsicum pubescens has pungent yellow, orange, red, green or brown fruits.
The pepper is small and finger-long, slender, and thin-walled. Although it turns from green to red upon ripening, it is usually harvested while green. The name refers to the fact that the tip of the chili pepper ( 唐辛子 , tōgarashi ) looks like the lion ( 獅子 , shishi ) head; in Japanese , it is often abbreviated as shishitō .