The Spicy Plant Summary
This article is a collaboration between ChatGPT and myself. My contributions end after the next sentence.
I ❤️ spicy food.
1. Peppers (Capsicum) — Capsaicin
- Found in: Chili peppers (red, green, bird’s eye, jalapeños, etc.)
- Sensation: Burning heat on tongue and lips
- Duration: Lingers, builds up
- Soluble in: Fat, not water
2. Black & White Pepper (Piper nigrum) — Piperine
- Found in: Black peppercorns, white pepper
- Sensation: Warm, sharp, earthy, slight throat burn
- Duration: Shorter than capsaicin
- Soluble in: Fat
- Note: Not a “pepper” in the Capsicum sense
3. Mustard Family (Brassicaceae) — Allyl Isothiocyanate
- Found in: Wasabi, mustard, horseradish, radish, raw cabbage
- Sensation: Sharp, vapor-like hit to sinuses and nose
- Duration: Intense but fades fast
- Soluble in: Water, unstable with heat
- Note: Known for nose burn, tear-jerking zing
4. Ginger Family (Zingiberaceae) — Gingerol, Shogaol, Zingerone
- Found in: Ginger, galangal
- Sensation: Warm, zesty, mellow spice
- Duration: Gentle and pleasant
- Note: Changes with cooking, gets milder and sweeter
5. Allium Family — Allicin
- Found in: Garlic, onions, shallots
- Sensation: Sharp, pungent heat when raw
- Duration: Short, strong aroma
- Note: Cooking softens dramatically
6. Sichuan Peppercorns — Sanshools
- Found in: Sichuan (or Szechuan) peppercorns
- Sensation: Numbing, tingling, buzzing
- Note: Not spicy in the traditional sense, but enhances heat, common in Sichuan cuisine’s “mala” (numbing-spicy) flavor