Scholarship table
What do you do with a hot sauce with "one million scoville units"? I felt obligated to buy "The Kraken" after I was alerted of the product. Are there options besides a vat of chili or a spicy soup or stew? I still don't get Scoville, not sure it's always accurate.
The only purpose of those super-hot hot sauces is for guys to try to win d*#k measuring contests (although I would not recommend applying directly to said appendage). They are virtually worthless for cooking. If a couple drops of a sauce (or more accurately, a “food additive”) will provide heat for an entire pot of chili, I’d submit that you’re better off trying something else with a little flavor to get that heat. And I say this as someone who loves hot sauces and cooking.
I love h-sauces and cooking as well but perhaps caved because of the "Kraken" name. Could I weaponize it like mace or something for protection?
If you buy it because you like the name — nothing wrong with that; I’ve done that myself a number of times — it’s most useful as a paperweight or a tchotchke.
Anal lube.
They put hot sauce in squirt guns to take over the radio station in the movie Airheads.
My old roommate thought of himself as spicy food fan based on pretty much nothing besides like some moderately spicy wings from BWW’s. He didn’t even eat spicy food when he was in India for 3 weeks for work. Anyways, he went to a trip down South with his family and bought a set of 7-8 hot sauces with insane names and Scoville ratings escalating in heat for a pretty high price, want to say close to $200. He was talking about putting them on pizza, making crazy wings, etc… he ate a wing with a bit of the “mildest” of the bunch…and it was so spicy it made him puke 😅He then decided to clean them out and make them decorative…which was an equally bad choice. Smelled and felt like someone maced the entire kitchen
TAMUI do know, Newsie is right on you knowing ball.
India is interesting. Porky has always loved Indian street food in particular but has found that what you get at your average Indian restaurant in the U.S. tends to be quite a bit spicier than what you find in India and not in a good way. Here they tend to aggressively pile on the spice whereas over there, the spice is definitely there, but much more nuanced and not as in your face. Many of the different spices they use over there are much more difficult to find over here so they load up on what's readily available here, which tends to be the really hot stuff. Porky knows because Porky's other half is Indian. Not just of Indian ethnicity, but born and partly raised in Mumbai and didn't become a U.S. citizen until her mid 20's. Porky's in-laws have a place there, and spend roughly half the year in India, and Porky's sister in-law has always lived in India full time except for the 4 years she spent in the U.S. to go to University. We go there often, and were actually supposed to go for 2 weeks in Feb of last year, but Covid unfortunately put the Kibosh on that. Porky was and still is looking forward to those meals, but probably won't be going again until Feb of 2023.
Does The Porky eat swine in India?
You may have first hand knowledge of this, but obviously India is a very large country with different spices and foods coming from different parts of the country. Sort of like American food is different in different regions... pizza and BBQ come to mind first.
Yea, but he's not too far off. Every Indian national I know echos it similarly. Whether from Mumbai, Delhi, my sister's BF's family from up near Kashmir, or over near Bangalore.London on the other hand is much truer in the nature of spice and authenticity of Indian cuisine.Porky, where does the fam live in Bombay? Bandra, Worli, Malabar? Or up near Kandavali/Boravali?
Porky couldn't agree more about London. Probably the best Indian Food in world. Better than India in most cases, although India still has the edge in veg. Porky hasn't been in London since early 2018 so no clue what the restaurant situation there is with the pandemic, but if anyone is headed there, Porky highly recommends Dishoom which is a fantastic representation of Indian Parsi cuisine. It's unfair to refer to it as a chain, but there are 5 or 6 locations throughout London. Wish they'd open one in NYC. As for Porky's family, the in-laws' place is right in between Malabar Hill and Worli off of Pedder Rd. It may still technically be Malabar not sure but if it is it's the northern part of Malabar just up the hill from Haji Ali circle. Porky's sister in law is in Colaba.
What does Porky think about Indian vs Pakistani food?
Porky isn't familiar enough with the latter to opine.
Porky is slipping on the third person