Washington, Feb 17 : Fears of a collective failure are threatening the Northeastern states: the downgrading of their chillies, which not long ago ascended the dizzying heights on the Scoville heat scale, the acknowledged international yardstick for measuring the heat sensation of chillies.
Associated Press
reported yesterday from Albuquerque that the Trinidad Moruga Scorpion
was on the verge of formally displacing the Bhut Jolokia, grown in the
Northeast, primarily in Assam, as the world’s hottest chilli.
The Bhut Jolokia
was declared by Guinness World Records as the world’s hottest chilli in
2007, putting the fruit — and another element of the Northeast — on the
global map. Other chillies grown in the Northeast, such as the Naga
Viper, have ascended and descended on the Scoville heat charts
periodically, but India has consistently had a pride of place in growing
chillies. At one point, the Naga Viper was credited with having
1,382,118 Scoville heat units but this figure was never conclusively
validated.
Bhut Jolokia’s
rise to fame came after it was established scientifically to have
1,001,304 Scoville heat units. Its challenger in waiting, from the
Caribbean, has been measured to be capable of exuding 1.2 million
Scoville heat units.
All may not be
lost for the Northeast yet: it may still be possible for the region to
protect its standard bearer in agriculture and the culinary world
because the Chile Pepper Institute, an international non-profit
organisation devoted to “educating the world about the wonders of chile
peppers” has not yet formally crowned the chilli from the Caribbean as
the lord of heat.
But there may not
be much time to be lost. As part of the Chile Pepper Institute’s
research, it planted some 125 varieties of chillies — including the Bhut
Jolokia — and fruits from each variety were picked, dried and ground
into powder.
Their
capsaicinoids, which emit the true chilli sensation were then measured
on the Scoville heat scale. That was when the Bhut Jolokia was displaced
by the Trinidad Moruga Scorpion.
Although the Chile
Pepper Institute based in Albuquerque has not yet formally announced
the findings of their latest research, the Associated Press interviewed
researchers at the institute for an exclusive story and it suggests that
the displacement of the Northeastern variety of chillies is not far
away.
The
acknowledgement by Guinness World Records five years ago that the Bhut
Jolokia was the world’s hottest chilli was also the result of research
at the Chile Pepper Institute. Till then, the Red Savina, grown in
California, was considered the world’s hottest chilli.
The Red Savina is
not, however, a fruit of natural evolution unlike the ones in the
Northeast or in the Caribbean. It was developed by a spice manufacturing
company in California and it is protected by the US Plant Variety
Protection Act.
As a result, the
method by which it was developed is secret. The Red Savina measures
merely a quarter of the Bhut Jolokia on the Scoville heat scale,
according to the Chile Pepper Institute, although there have been claims
that its strength could go up to half a million Scoville heat units.
Like a lot of the
research in the US in the 21st century, the latest initiative by the
Chile Pepper Institute has also been prodded by industry for commercial
reasons. As the market for chilli hot foods grow, commercial firms
producing them and the restaurant business worldwide are keen to
establish standards for heat levels and put an end to freelance claims
about the potency of different varieties of chillies.
AP said the Chile
Pepper Institute is funded by industry groups that have a vital interest
in the outcomes of its research, in addition to US government
grants.There is much that the Northeastern states, which have a stake in
growing chillies, could learn from collaboration between the Institute
and the industry in America. For example, one Ohio company, CaJohns
Fiery Foods, has already teamed up with the Chile Pepper Institute and
is using the reputation of Bhut Jolokia to market products called Holy
Jolokia Hot Sauce at $14 per bottle and Holy Jolokia Salsa and Barbecue
Sauce at $15 per jar.
India’s ministry
of development of Northeastern region, set up in 2001, teamed up with
the UN’s International Fund for Agricultural Development on a project to
improve the livelihoods of people through capacity building and
introduction of new technology and techniques for sustainable growth.
It has a focus on
specifically on cultivation of chillies. But at the ministry, the fate
of this project after 2008, when it was to expire, was not known, when
queries were made yesterday.
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