RHYS: The other day I bought a chicken sandwich at a deli. It was a really good sandwich, crispy bread, lots of white meat chicken, lettuce, tomatoes and I was really enjoying it until.... I bit into a chili pepper. A really hot chili pepper. You know, the kind that makes your eyes water.
I went up to the counter and complained and was told, "Most people like it that way." As if I was an old fuddy-duddy who didn't appreciate good food. This is really stupid. If you eat a chili, all you taste from then on is...chili. It could be chicken or cardboard, it wouldn't matter.
I've certainly become aware that food tastes are changing with the latest immigrants. We all eat tacos now, we even eat mole which is really spicy. Indian food is showing up more often. Thai food is everywhere and that's pretty hot. And it seems that to eat hot food has become a macho sort of thing. Look at those commercials for buffalo wings--the kind that make steam blow out of a person's ears.
I watch people (usually men) spray tabasco sauce all over their breakfast eggs, looking around with satisfaction as if to say "Look at me. I'm fearless."
So why this attraction for really hot food. Spices were originally added to dishes in countries without refrigeration to stop meat from spoiling. If you could buy good fresh meat from the butcher you didn't need to disguise its flavor under a mountain of spices. If you cook something delicate like shrimp in a spicy sauce its flavor is completely overwhelmed. What's more, if you eat too much hot foot, it spoils your palate for delicate flavors. Are we raising a generation who will never appreciate French
cooking, or grilled fish, unless it's blackened?
I'm afraid that I still like subtle flavors and good fresh food. Lamb chops grilled, fillet of petrale sole, lobster, oysters, fresh asparagus. Mmmmm. I do enjoy an occasional curry or even a Thai meal, but not the really hot ones. Chicken tikka masala, rogan gosh, sag paneer..which is spinach with curd cheese. But really good curries retain the flavor of the food. A chicken sandwich with sliced chili peppers is a wasted sandwich.
So what about you, Reds--do you approve of this fascination with really hot and spicy food?
Even though I do cook some dishes that are spicy, I am not a fan of overly spiced, hot dishes that bring tears to your eyes. Chili peppers on chicken salad? I’d be upset, too. Since they seem to be such a peculiar addition to a chicken salad sandwich, I’d have thought that the deli menu would have mentioned the inclusion of sliced chili peppers on the sandwich, which would have given you the opportunity to ask for them to be left off so that you could enjoy the chicken salad . . . . The flip “Most people like it that way” seems like a rather strange attitude since their business would depend on customers returning to eat there again . . . .
ReplyDeleteThe substances that give chili peppers their intensity when ingested or applied topically are capsaicin (8-methyl-N-vanillyl-6-nonenamide) and several related chemicals, collectively called capsaicinoids. When consumed, capsaicinoids bind with pain receptors in the mouth and throat that are responsible for sensing heat. The brain responds to the burning sensation by raising the heart rate, increasing perspiration, and RELEASING ENDORPHINS. -- Wikipedia
ReplyDeleteI do like hot food, but not as hot as I used to Rhys.And they shouldn't surprise you with it!
ReplyDeleteMy favorite sandwich in Key West is a chicken burrito from Bad Boy Burrito (ooh that fits with our bad boy post this week!)--it has black beans, rice, and whatever toppings you wish. But they always recommend jalapenos! (great source of vitamin C too)
Well, I think you have the right to complain about this one, Rhys. How disappointing.
ReplyDeleteI heard food writer Michael Pollan on the radio the other day, talking about his new book, Cooked: A Natural History of Transformation. One of the things he said about eating out (or eating processed food, which is sometimes the same thing) really resonated with me: when you allow someone else to prepare your food, you also allow them to choose the quality and freshness (or not) of the ingredients, and you lose control of the whole process.
Which made me think about situations like yours, where you lose control of how the food is prepared, as well. We once went to a renowned local steakhouse, where the steaks are supposed to be the best in Cincinnati. My steak, however, was so heavily salted that it would have been difficult to tell whether it was a "good" steak or not; I could not taste any actual meat flavor.
"Most people like it that way" is pretty meaningless, since so many people, especially in the US, have lost their discrimination for what is actually good, fresh, and flavorful. How sad, and how sad that it's so difficult to enjoy an occasional meal out that is well-prepared and delicious.
I used to have this husband who loved Tabasco sauce and would pour it on everything. Kind of makes me wonder why I bothered cooking at all.
ReplyDeleteI live in Texas and I don't like everything hot! I even make 1-Alarm chili. I do like Thai, Indian, Mexican, and middle Eastern food, but I agree that overly spiced food just ruins people's palates. When I do eat
ReplyDeleterestaurant or take-out food, most of the time it's so salty I can't even tell what it is.
A curious thing, though--I'm a big Jamie Oliver fan, and many of Jamie's recipes call for a smidgen of fresh red chiles (or "chilli", as Jamie spells it.) Our supermarkets here in north Texas always have fresh green chilis, but NEVER red. Hmmm.
PS Karen, I want to read the Michael Pollan book. Do you recommend?
ReplyDeleteDeb, I have not yet read his new one yet, but all his other books I've read were great: The Botany of Desire, The Omnivore's Dilemma, and In Defense of Food. He also wrote a wonderful little book on building his own writer's hut, an outbuilding on his home's property, that I read while overseeing an addition on our house. That one is called A Place of My Own. He's a great writer, and his way of looking at food is eye-opening and interesting.
ReplyDeleteCaptcha does have a sense of humor! eglike all
No endorphins for me, Austin. I'm just looking for the nearest glass of water.
ReplyDeleteBut I think you're right, Lucy. I can't tolerate food as hot as I used to eat. And I've never managed to eat neat jalapenos.
No, not water! Doesn't that make it worse?
ReplyDeleteI so like spicy food--but not so much that it makes you unable to breathe. You have tone careful of those red things in Szechuan food, right?
I do put hot pepper flakes in scrambled eggs, though..
I like hot, too... but not seriously hot. I think you have to have grown up with it to be able to handle truly hot Indian food or hot hot peppers. I do like hot peppers on my Italian subs.
ReplyDeleteSo I like Michael Pollan, agree with his focus on eating fresh foods not packaged. But sometimes (am I the only who thinks this?) he drifts over into schoolmarm territory in terms of telling us how to live. And I'm someone who virtually never eats or cooks anything that comes packaged. But don't take the fun out of eating out... please. The occasional Whopper with Cheese isn't going to kill me.
First off, Rhys, that person who made the flip remark should have been reported to the manager and/or owner. Customer service is key to a successful business in the current financial climate. No excuse for rudeness!
ReplyDeleteI love hot, but only with certain things. Spicy is great, and as most good cooks will tell you, spicy does not equal burn your tongue off. I agree that too much hot kills your palate.
Hallie, if the occasional cheeseburger is going to kill me, at least I'll die happy. I'm a firm believer that the emphasis on everything we eat is bad for us is just flat silly!
And don't I just sound as pompous as some of those who tout the idea that the only way to eat right is to eat how they eat, lol.
I have loved cooking all my life and think that fast food as is served regularly now, relies on hot, spicy stuff which covers up the real lack of taste which comes from respecting what you are cooking . Of course spices handled by a responsible chef always enhances flavour of meats, but should never overwhelm.. Hot peppers often destroy an otherwise delicious meal. Just sayin'....
ReplyDeleteI have a question---did the "menu" list the ingredients of the sandwich? If so, was the jalapeno listed? I always have to ask what is in any dishes I may order as I am allergic to mushrooms. I always ask no matter if there is a list or not. However, I do love spicy, especially the style of New Mexico. My mother was born and raised in Arizona and she had her hot sauce with her at all times...even in the nursing home.
ReplyDeleteHi Rhys,
ReplyDeleteHow awful for you! Even in Tucson they give you a choice or a warning about hot peppers, although I am pretty sure the chili peppers were in use here in Arizona and California long before European arrival. There is archaeological evidence in Ecuador and elsewhere that chiles were domesticated over 6,000 years ago and were one of the first crops cultivated in the Americas.
I love the flavor of chiles but not the heat, so I always use the milder ones. In restaurants I sometimes request they be left out, because I find they are often called mild when they are very hot. Our favorite Mexican restaurants in California and Arizona identify the variety of the pepper rather than a subjective evaluation of heat.
Don't drink water. The capsaicin is carried in the oil of the pepper. Eat a piece of bread or flour tortilla to absorb the oil. Auntie-Mom carries a packet of saltines in her bag for such emergencies.
Fun blog, Rhys.
I don't eat anything "hot" , "spicy", "tangy", or even "zesty"....and I'd prefer not too salty. Since I once had a horrible allergic response to hot peppers..making my entire face swell, including the inside of my mouth ....I don't even want to be in the same room with hot peppers. No Jalepeno's or even banana peppers, chili peppers, etc. Also, I prefer to actually taste the food, not the spice.
ReplyDeleteJane S.
Rhys, that was just awful! It was definitely NOT the sort of sandwich that called for any sort of hot pepper. And it should have been mentioned in the menu.
ReplyDeleteI am not a fan of spicy foods. I do like flavor and I do like to cook with herbs and spices but I don't go overboard with the hotter spices; just a dash will do. If I eat a restaurant meal that tastes heavily of a hot spice and the menu gave no warning of how heavily spiced it would be, I'd avoid that restaurant in the future, or order a different meal there if I had no choice about returning there, such as for a meeting or a special event.
One of the big mistakes people make with Mexican and Latin American/Caribbean cooking is to think it's all loaded with the hottest peppers available. Not so. There are tons of different varieties of peppers ranging from quite mild to burns the mouth. And even if you are using the hottest, you only use a tiny bit for flavor. If you burn out someone's taste buds, they can't taste any flavor. Five-alarm anything has no real taste, at all.
ReplyDeleteReine's absolutely right about bread, tortilla, or rice ( or even potato) to counteract the sting of too much hot pepper. Sorry the guy at the restaurant was such a jerk, Rhys!
I'm basically a chicken here (not as in sandwich, but as in not willing to OD on those endorphins Austin educated us about!) I like some spice, but not so hot that I can't taste everything else.
ReplyDeletePeppers don't belong in chicken salad! Period. I like some things spicy, but usually mild spicy. Like Tex-Mex. I do love boiled crawfish when they're in season, but too many restaurants ruin them by overspicing them. Fresh crawfish have a delicate sweet taste which is obliterated when peppers, etc are tossed in the seasoning. So, spice is good but in its place.
ReplyDeleteNO - I do not like spicy/hot foods
ReplyDeleteOnly thing I like a tad warm is cocktail sauce, my Daddy use to make his own, ketchup and horseradish, but that is the only thing I like with a bite to it....since I'm allergic to seafood, I don't eat CS anymore
Sorry your sandwich was ruined
I'm so particular if we eat out (rare because of my allergies) whatever I do order I always tell them exactly what I want and if it comes with something I don't want - I make them write down NO tomato, No **** etc then, I have to check my food before eating, so if they screw up they fix it over
I was reading an article on foods in restaurants a while back.....how much fat, sodium, etc were in a lot of the foods, blew me away, I knew restaurant foods were getting less healthy, but OMG I pulled up menus on places like, Applebees, Olive Garden, some other "family" chain places
The amount of sodium and fat in so many of their foods was enough for 1 person for a day, some dishes enough for a few days - even the kids menu was unhealthy
I don't understand the need to add so much fat and salt to everything, it did not use to be that way.....Sad
I'd be just as happy if I never had to encounter any kind of pepper. Chili, red, green, yellow or black. I was raised on food that was lightly spiced and tasted delicious. Mexican food is or overly spiced that I only order salads without the "salsa". I ate a plate of spaghetti one time that was burning my lips as the fork was approaching my mouth. Awful!
ReplyDelete