Pepper X is now the world’s spiciest chili: ‘Feeling the heat for hours’



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There’s a new no. 1 hottie in town.

A sweltering South Carolina chili named Pepper X has captured the Guinness World Record for the world’s hottest pepper, beating out former title holder the Carolina Reaper.

“I was feeling the heat for three-and-a-half hours,” creator Ed Currie, the founder of the PuckerButt Pepper company and a veritable Dr. Oppenheimer of peppers, told the Associated Press of eating his creation, which was recognized by Guinness on October 9.

The greenish-yellow pepper was first unveiled on the web series “Hot Ones” — in which celebrities are challenged to eat 10 hot wings with progressively hotter sauces — on Tuesday as the culmination of Currie’s decade-long epicurean arms race to devise the ultimate naughty nightshade.

It’s safe to say he put his money where his mouth is: Pepper X packs a sweltering 2,693,000 Scoville Heat Units — the rubric that measures pepper spiciness based on their concentration of capsaicin (the active ingredient that creates the burning sensation).

“I was laid out flat on a marble wall for approximately an hour in the rain, groaning in pain,” said Currie while describing the pepper’s effects.
AP

That officially makes it the hottest pepper on earth, dethroning the scorching Carolina reaper — also invented by Currie — which clocks in at 1.64 million on the Scoville scale.

It’s even spicier than pepper spray, which has a score of 1.6 million SHU. (For perspective, jalapeño registers approximately 3,000 to 8,000 SHU).

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After eating one, Currie said he experienced a napalm-esque burn that lasted for over three hours.

Ed Currie holds up his certification that his new Pepper X variety of peppers is the hottest in the world according to the Guinness Book of World Records on Tuesday, Oct. 10, 2023.
AP

“Those cramps are horrible,” lamented the South Carolinian, who is one of five people to try the scintillating chili. “I was laid out flat on a marble wall for approximately an hour in the rain, groaning in pain.”

It reportedly took over ten years to create this weapons-grade vegetable, made by crossbreeding a Carolina reaper and a “brutally hot” mystery species that Currie received from a friend in Michigan.

“We covered the genetics, we covered the chemistry, we covered the botany,” recalled the inventor while describing the process of engineering the perfect pepper.

A Carolina Reaper, which previously held the title of World’s Hottest Pepper.
AP

Pepper X is by no means the end goal of Currie’s capsaicin-boosting campaign.

“It’s not the pinnacle,” declared the spiciness splicer, who plans to engineer peppers far hotter than his latest creation in the future.

Those formidable enough to brave the heat can visit their website to peruse and purchase products containing the record-breaking Pepper X.

Would you try it — or would you prefer to see The Post put our bizarre eats extraordinaire Ben Cost to the test? Let us know in the comments.



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