Non-Irish Boy Eats Carolina Reaper

The look of regret when he puts it in his mouth is classic.
siftbotsays...

Promoting this video and sending it back into the queue for one more try; last queued Tuesday, July 21st, 2015 8:13pm PDT - promote requested by PlayhousePals.

TheFreaksays...

Third year growing Reapers and they're amazing. So intense. It's the real life Insanity Pepper.
That kid did pretty good but the video definitely ended too soon. He was just about to discover his spirit animal.

Bruti79says...

Man, if you want to kill the heat, drink something sugary. The milk is only to help the stomach when it gets blasted. The Scoville Scale, I believe, is based on how much sugar it takes to neutralize the spice.

Reach for a soda. =)

gorillamansays...

And at 2 million SHU, assuming the chilli is ~1g, you only need to drink 2,000 litres of soda to totally neutralise the heat!

Bruti79said:

Man, if you want to kill the heat, drink something sugary. The milk is only to help the stomach when it gets blasted. The Scoville Scale, I believe, is based on how much sugar it takes to neutralize the spice.

Reach for a soda. =)

ChaosEnginesays...

A few years ago, one of my favourite beer companies made a brew to complement Culleys Carolina Reaper sauce.
I tried it at a beer festival and they had some reapers on the counter.
"Can I try one?"
"They're really just for show, but if you really want to, knock yourself out..."

Tried it, seconds later downed an entire pint of 9% beer before I realised what I'd done. I don't remember anything else about that day...

moduloussays...

Sounds like he has English parents but lives in Scotland or the other way around. For the record the elder (I believe its a grandfather) has a pretty strong northern English accent so it's reasonable to suppose the family has a bit of a mixture and that's represented in his ambiguous accent.

I detect no Irish, though.

Clues: The way he says 'nine' is Scottish. Irish would tend towards 'noyn'. When he says 'It is a real one', the 'it is' is characteristically Scottish. When the elder says 'I know' he says 'I naaaw' which is so Northern English its untrue - the final 'E R' nails it.

Reefiesays...

Minor quibble that has nothing to do with the subject of eating hot food - that's not an Irish accent!

Ah, seems Modulous has already pointed out the obvious

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