Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You realize that is the whole point of hot spice? To mask the flavor of the spoiled food underneath. Think it is a coincidence that hot and spicy developed in hot climates?
Not. Chilies were used for their spice and flavor but also because it kept the food from spoiling. not to mask the flavor of spoiled food.
No. Partly to mask it.
Nope. Spices are expensive and were only affordable to rich people who did not need to eat spoiled food.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You realize that is the whole point of hot spice? To mask the flavor of the spoiled food underneath. Think it is a coincidence that hot and spicy developed in hot climates?
Not. Chilies were used for their spice and flavor but also because it kept the food from spoiling. not to mask the flavor of spoiled food.
No. Partly to mask it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You realize that is the whole point of hot spice? To mask the flavor of the spoiled food underneath. Think it is a coincidence that hot and spicy developed in hot climates?
Not. Chilies were used for their spice and flavor but also because it kept the food from spoiling. not to mask the flavor of spoiled food.
Anonymous wrote:You realize that is the whole point of hot spice? To mask the flavor of the spoiled food underneath. Think it is a coincidence that hot and spicy developed in hot climates?
Anonymous wrote:I don't get it at all. What's the point of eating something so spicy that there's no taste other than tears and pain?
I have a friend who likes to brag about the various spicy foods eating challenges he's done. He did some atomic burger challenge recently and when another friend asked him if it was a good burger, his response was, "no clue because all I could taste was hot."
Gross. I like spicy, but not 'make my nose so runny I'm sniffling through dinner' spicy.