Current:Home > FinanceWhat is the hottest pepper in the world? Pepper X, Carolina Reaper ranked on the spice scale -StockSource
What is the hottest pepper in the world? Pepper X, Carolina Reaper ranked on the spice scale
Johnathan Walker View
Date:2025-04-08 11:35:31
You may like spicy foods, but do you think you could handle the hottest pepper in the world? In the world of record-breaking hot ones, there's a new sheriff in town – the Guinness World Records crowned the new winner in October 2023.
While we may willingly eat spicy peppers, scientists believe their capsaicinoids – the compound that makes them hot – evolved to scare off animals trying to take a bite. Birds, on the other hand, don't have the same heat-sensing receptors in their mouths, so they can handle peppers without the same heat we feel. Their pepper-snacking may have helped disperse seeds on a wider geographical scale, according to New Mexico State University.
Here's the one that ranks as the world’s hottest pepper.
What is the hottest pepper in the world?
The world's hottest pepper is the Pepper X, grown by Ed Currie of the PuckerButt Pepper Company in South Carolina. The Pepper X dethroned the Caroline Reaper (also created by Currie) in October 2023 and now holds the Guinness World Record title. It clocked in at just under 2.7 million Scoville Heat Units, the scale used to rank how spicy peppers are. The Reaper averaged 1.64 million SHU and peaked at about 2.2 million SHU.
For comparison, a jalapeño registers about 2,500 to 8,000 SHU and cayenne pepper is 30,000 to 50,000 SHU.
According to Guinness World Records, Currie crossbreeds over 100 peppers each year in the hopes that, over a 10-year process, it'll yield a new spicy pepper or two.
Is spicy food good for you?The role it plays in your immune system
Can you eat the world’s hottest pepper?
"Hot Ones" host Sean Evans and guests were left in tears after eating Currie's new Pepper X. When Currie unveiled it in October, he told the Associated Press he was only one of five people to eat an entire Pepper X so far.
“I was feeling the heat for three-and-a-half hours. Then the cramps came,” Currie told AP. “Those cramps are horrible. I was laid out flat on a marble wall for approximately an hour in the rain, groaning in pain.”
In 2018, a 34-year-old man went to the emergency room complaining of severe headaches just days after eating a Carolina Reaper. Newsweek reported that brain scans revealed constricted arteries that eventually returned to their normal state five weeks later. In 2020, the National Center for Biotechnological Information reported an incident of a 15-year-old boy who ate a Carolina Reaper and had an acute cerebellar stroke two days later after being hospitalized because of headaches.
Still, the world's hottest peppers continue to be eaten. League of Fire ranks chili-eating champions with a specific set of rules – they need the details of the official event, the credentials of the witnesses present and no more than 200 Carolina Reapers can be consumed.
The title is held by Gregory “Iron Guts” Barlow of Melbourne, Australia, who ate 160 Reapers in one sitting. In second place is Duston "Atomik Menace" Johnson of Las Vegas, who ate 122 peppers.
What are the top five hottest peppers?
According to PepperHead and based on the new world record, here are the five peppers that pack the most heat:
- Pepper X: 2,693,000 SHU
- Carolina Reaper: 2,200,000 SHU
- Trinidad Moruga Scorpion: 2,009,231 SHU
- 7 Pot Douglah: 1,853,936 SHU
- 7 Pot Primo: 1,469,000 SHU
How do you measure how hot a pepper is?
Pharmacist Wilbur Scoville invented the Scoville scale in 1912 to measure a pepper’s heat. According to Masterclass, Scoville tested peppers by mixing sugar water with an alcohol-based extract of capsaicin oil – the chemical compound in chili peppers that makes them hot. Scoville placed the solution with water on the taste testers’ tongues and diluted it with water to rank how spicy the testers thought it was.
Now, scientists use a more high-tech method instead of tongue testing. High-Performance Liquid Chromatography determines the concentration of capsaicin in a pepper using the same Scoville ranking system.
Pure capsaicin ranks at 16 million SHU.
Hottest place on Earth:This is the valley with the highest temperatures
Just Curious for more? We've got you covered
USA TODAY is exploring the questions you and others ask every day. From "What exercise burns the most calories?" to "What is the healthiest vegetable?" to "What is the debt ceiling?" – we're striving to find answers to the most common questions you ask every day. Head to our Just Curious section to see what else we can answer for you.
veryGood! (226)
Related
- Bill Belichick's salary at North Carolina: School releases football coach's contract details
- Halle Berry will pay ex Olivier Martinez $8K a month in child support amid finalized divorce
- First GOP debate kicks off in Milwaukee with attacks on Biden, Trump absent from the stage
- Melissa Joan Hart was almost fired off 'Sabrina the Teenage Witch' after racy Maxim cover
- Federal court filings allege official committed perjury in lawsuit tied to Louisiana grain terminal
- Black bear euthanized after attacking 7-year-old boy in New York
- All 8 people rescued from cable car dangling hundreds of feet above canyon in Pakistan, officials say
- The Fukushima nuclear plant is ready to release radioactive wastewater into sea later Thursday
- New data highlights 'achievement gap' for students in the US
- Mom gets life for stabbing newborn and throwing the baby in a river in 1992. DNA cracked the case
Ranking
- Meet first time Grammy nominee Charley Crockett
- Nia Long Files For Full Custody of Her & Ime Udoka's Son Nearly One Year After Cheating Scandal
- Larsa Pippen and Marcus Jordan Set the Record Straight on Their Relationship Status
- Watch the astonishing moment this dog predicts his owner is sick before she does
- DeepSeek: Did a little known Chinese startup cause a 'Sputnik moment' for AI?
- What Trump's GA surrender will look like, Harold makes landfall in Texas: 5 Things podcast
- Appalachian Economy Sees Few Gains From Natural Gas Development, Report Says
- Louisiana fights wildfires, as extreme heat and dry weather plague the state
Recommendation
Man can't find second winning lottery ticket, sues over $394 million jackpot, lawsuit says
NBA’s Jimmy Butler and singer Sebastián Yatra play tennis at a US Open charity event for Ukraine
CBS News poll analysis: At the first Republican debate what policy goals do voters want to hear? Stopping abortions isn't a top one
India’s spacecraft is preparing to land on the moon in the country’s second attempt in 4 years
IRS recovers $4.7 billion in back taxes and braces for cuts with Trump and GOP in power
Giuliani is expected to turn himself in on Georgia 2020 election indictment charges
Giants tight end Tommy Sweeney collapses from ‘medical event,’ in stable condition
More than 100,000 people have been evacuated over 3 weeks from flooding in Pakistan