From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
For other uses, see
Chili.
Chili pepper (from
Nahuatl chilli), also known as, or spelled,
chilli pepper,
chilli,
chillie,
chili, and
chile, is the
fruit[1] of the plants from the
genus Capsicum, members of the
nightshade family, Solanaceae.
Chili peppers originated in the Americas. Their
cultivars are now grown around the world, because they are widely used as food and as medicine.
History
Chili peppers have been a part of the human diet in the Americas since at least 7500 BC. There is archaeological evidence at sites located in southwestern
Ecuador that chili peppers were
domesticated more than 6000 years ago,
[2][3] and is one of the first cultivated crops in the Americas that is
self-pollinating.
Chili peppers were domesticated at least in different parts of South and Central America.
[4]
Chilies were cultivated around the globe after Columbus.
[5][6] Diego Álvarez Chanca, a physician on Columbus' second voyage to the West Indies in 1493, brought the first chili peppers to Spain, and first wrote about their medicinal effects in 1494.
From
Mexico, at the time the Spanish colony that controlled commerce with Asia, chili peppers spread rapidly into the
Philippines and then to
India,
China,
Korea and
Japan. They were quickly incorporated into the local cuisines.
An alternate sequence for chili peppers' spread has the Portuguese getting the pepper from Spain, and thence to India, as described by Lizzie Collingham in her book
Curry.
[7] Collingham states in her book that the chili pepper figures heavily in the cuisine of the Goan region of India, which was the site of a Portuguese colony (e.g.
vindaloo, an Indian interpretation of a Portuguese dish). Collingham also describes the journey of chili peppers from India, through Central Asia and
Turkey, to
Hungary, where it became the national spice in the form of
paprika.
There are speculations about pre-Columbian chili peppers in Europe. In an archaeological dig in the block of St. Botulf in
Lund, archaeologists found a
Capsicum frutescens in a layer dating to the 13th century. Hjelmqvist says that
Capsicum was described by the Greek
Theophrastus (370-286 BC). He mentions other ancient sources. The Roman poet
Martialis (around the 1st century) described "Piper crudum" (raw pepper) to be long and containing seeds. The description of the plants does not fit
black pepper (Piper nigrum) but does fit that of
long pepper.
[8]
Species and cultivars
The common species of chili peppers are:
- Capsicum annuum, which includes many common varieties such as bell peppers, wax, cayenne, jalapeños, and the chiltepin
- Capsicum frutescens, which includes the tabasco and Thai peppers
- Capsicum chinense, which includes the hottest peppers such as the naga, habanero, Datil and Scotch bonnet
- Capsicum pubescens, which includes the South American rocoto peppers
- Capsicum baccatum, which includes the South American aji peppers
Assorted bell pepper vegetables from Mexico
Though there are only a few commonly used species, there are many cultivars and methods of preparing chili peppers that have different names for culinary use. Green and red
bell peppers, for example, are the same cultivar of
C. annuum, immature peppers being green. In the same species are the jalapeño, the
poblano (which when dried is referred to as ancho), New Mexico (which is also known as chile colorado),
Anaheim,
serrano, and other cultivars.
Peppers are commonly broken down into three groupings: bell peppers, sweet peppers, and hot peppers. Most popular pepper varieties are seen as falling into one of these categories or as a cross between them.
Intensity
The 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.
[9][10] Capsaicin is the primary ingredient in
pepper spray.
When consumed, capsaicinoids bind with
pain receptors in the mouth and throat that are normally responsible for sensing heat. Once activated by the capsaicinoids, these receptors send a message to the brain that the person has consumed something hot. The brain responds to the burning sensation by raising the heart rate, increasing perspiration and release of
endorphins. A 2008 study
[11] reports that capsaicin alters how the body's cells use energy produced by hydrolysis of
ATP. In the normal hydrolysis the
SERCA protein uses this energy to move
calcium ions into the sarcoplasmic reticulum. When capsaicin is present, it alters the conformation of the SERCA, and thus reduces the ion movement; as a result the ATP energy (which would have been used to pump the ions) is instead released as heat.
[12]
The "heat" of chili peppers is measured in
Scoville heat units (SHU), which is the number of times a chili extract must be diluted in water for it to lose its heat. Bell peppers rank at 0 SHU, New Mexico green chilis at about 1,500 SHU, jalapeños at 3,000–6,000 SHU, and habaneros at 300,000 SHU.
[citation needed] The record for the hottest chili pepper was assigned by
Guinness World Records to the
naga jolokia (from northeastern India), measuring over 1,000,000 SHU.
[citation needed] Pure
capsaicin, which is a
hydrophobic, colorless, odorless, and crystalline-to-waxy solid at room temperature, measures 16,000,000 SHU.
[citation needed]
Uses
Culinary uses
The chili has a long association with and is extensively used in
Mexican and certain
South American cuisines, and later adapted into the emerging
Tex-Mex cuisine. Although unknown in Africa and Asia until its introduction from the New World by the Europeans, the chili pepper has since become an essential pillar of the cuisines of many Asian countries.
The fruit is eaten raw or cooked for its fiery hot flavour, concentrated along the top of the
pod. The stem end of the pod has most of the glands that produce the capsaicin. The white flesh surrounding the seeds contains the highest concentration of capsaicin. Removing the inner membranes is thus effective at reducing the heat of a pod.
Fresh Indian Green Chilis sold in HAL market,
Bangalore
Indian Vegetable Salad containing Lemon, Tomato, Radish, Beetroot, Cucumber and Green Chillies
Chili is sold worldwide fresh, dried and powdered. In the United States, it is often made from the Mexican chile ancho variety, but with small amounts of cayenne added for heat. In the Southwest United States, dried ground chili peppers, cumin, garlic and oregano is often known as chili powder. Chipotles are dry, smoked red (ripe) jalapeños.
Chili peppers are used around the world to make a countless variety of sauces, known as
hot sauce,
chile sauce, or
pepper sauce. In
Turkey, chilis are known as
Kırmızı Biber (red pepper) or
Acı Biber (hot pepper), and are used in the form of either red pepper paste (Biber Salçasi), which can be hot or mild.
Harissa is a hot pepper sauce made of chili, garlic and flavoured with spices, originating in
Tunisia and widely used in
its cuisine, both as a condiment and as seasoning. Harissa is also found in other
North African cuisines, though it is often treated as a table condiment to be served on the side.
Indian cooking has multiple uses for chilis, from simple snacks like
bhaji, where the chilis are dipped in batter and fried, to complex curries. Chilis are dried, roasted and salted as a side dish for rice varieties such as "Dadhyodanam" ("dadhi" curd, "Odanam" cooked and ready to eat rice in
Sanskrit) or "thayir sadam" (Tamil name for curd rice) elsewhere in India known as Dahibhaat, or daal rice (rice with split peas or any variety of lentils). The soaked and dried chillies are a seasoning ingredient in recipes such as kootu. It is called "mirapa" (మిరప)in
telugu. Telugu cuisine uses chilly pickles made almost entirely in chilly, while Jain and Kolhapuri cuisines are known to be of the most extreme users of chilly in proportion to the quantity of food.
Amongst the varieties used regularly in India the longer ones are the most common, length generally comparable to an adult person's smallest finger, while the hottest ones are about half to one quarter of that size and are called "clove chilly" (lavangie mirchie) due to the size. In Tamilnadu longer dried red chillies are used for all other seasonings while round dried red chillies are used for daal preparations such as Saambhaar or KoLumbu (L standing for the sound at the end of the way Germans would pronounce words ending in ld, especially town names such as Nagold).
In various parts of India often people, especially farm workers and people connected to roots, use fresh green chilly to take a bite every so often during a meal. This is so common a practice that some dishes in north, especially Punjab (Panjaab) are served with fresh whole green chilly or two, along with lime and - or - tomato slices; for example one preparation of the very popular "chhole" (garbanzo) is served that way, made dry and spicy and eaten with variety of variations of chapaatie such as kulchaa or bhaturaa.
Chilies are a ubiquitous part of
Bangladeshi cooking, with three types most commonly used. Bogura Chili, grown mostly in the Jessore district, are very hot. Green chilies are used in vegetable and fish dishes, as well as raw compliments to a salad or meal. Red chili is allowed to ripen, then dried and used in meat curry, or fire roasted and added to mash potatoes or bhatta.
Sambal is a versatile relish made from chili peppers as well as other ingredients, such as garlic, onion, shallots, salt, vinegar and sugar, which is popular in Indonesia and Malaysia, and also in Sri Lanka (called "sambol") and South Africa, where they were introduced by
Malay migrant workers who arrived in the 19th century
[citation needed]. It can be used as a dipping sauce, as an ingredient in recipes and even as a dressing for cold dishes
(or "salads").
Chili pepper plant leaves, mildly bitter but not nearly as hot as the vegetables that come from the same plant, are cooked as
greens in Filipino cuisine, where they are called
dahon ng sili (literally "chili leaves"). They are used in the chicken soup,
tinola.
[13] In Korean cuisine, the leaves may be used in
kimchi. (풋고추잎 깍두기).
[14] In Japanese cuisine, the leaves are cooked as greens, and also cooked in
tsukudani style for preservation.
Decoration
Chili peppers can also be used decoratively
Some chili peppers are not grown for consumption; they are instead grown for decorative qualities as "ornamental peppers". Some are too hot for typical cooking, or are not palatable. Regardless, ornamental peppers have unusual shapes or colours. Examples include
Thai ornamental, black pearl, marble, and
numex twilight. The medusa pepper is a green plant that produces vegetable starting purple, then ripening to yellow, orange, and red. Black pearl has black leaves and round black fruit that ripen to a bright red.
[citation needed]
Superstition
In India, chili is used with lime to ward off
evil spirits and is seen in vehicles and in homes for that purpose.
[citation needed] It is used to check the
evil eye and remove its effects in
Hinduism Psychologist
Paul Rozin suggests that eating chilis is an example of a "constrained risk" like riding a
roller coaster, in which extreme sensations like pain and fear can be enjoyed because individuals know that these sensations are not actually harmful. This method lets people experience extreme feelings without any risk of bodily harm.
[15]
The Black Pearl cultivar has round black fruit that ripens to a bright red
Scotch bonnet chili peppers in a Caribbean market
Medicinal
Capsaicin is a safe and effective
analgesic agent in the management of arthritis pain, herpes zoster-related pain, diabetic neuropathy, postmastectomy pain, and headaches.
[16]
Personal defence
Main article:
pepper spray
Nutritional value
Red chilis contain high amounts of
vitamin C and
carotene (provitamin A). Yellow and especially green chilis (which are essentially unripe fruit) contain a considerably lower amount of both substances. In addition, peppers are a good source of most
B vitamins, and
vitamin B6 in particular. They are very high in
potassium and high in
magnesium and
iron. Their high vitamin C content can also substantially increase the uptake of non-heme iron from other ingredients in a meal, such as beans and grains.
Chili peppers drying in Kathmandu, Nepal
Evolutionary advantages
Birds do not have the same sensitivity to capsaicin, because it targets a specific
pain receptor in mammals. Chili peppers are eaten by birds living in the chili peppers' natural range. The seeds of the peppers are distributed by the birds that drop the seeds while eating the pods, and the seeds pass through the
digestive tract unharmed. This relationship may have promoted the evolution of the protective capsaicin.
[17] Products based on this substance have been sold to treat the seeds in bird feeders to deter
squirrels and other mammalian
vermin without also deterring birds. Capsaicin is also a defense mechanism against microbial fungi that invades through punctures made in the outer skin by various insects.
[18]
Spelling and usage
The three primary spellings are chili, chile and chilli, all of which are recognized by dictionaries.
- Chili is widely used, although in much of South America the plant and its vegetable are better known as ají, locoto, chile, or rocoto. However, this spelling is discouraged by some in the United States of America, since it also commonly refers to a popular Southwestern-American dish (also known as chili con carne (literally chili with meat); the official state dish of Texas[19]), as well as to the mixture of cumin and other spices (chili powder) used to flavor it. Chili, as in the case of Cincinnati chili, can also refer to ground beef stews that do not actually contain any chile peppers. Chili powder and chile powder, on the other hand, can both refer to dried, ground chili peppers.
- Chile is an alternate usage, the most common Spanish spelling in Mexico,[20] as well as some parts of the United States of America and Canada, which refers specifically to this plant and its fruit. In the American Southwest (particularly northern New Mexico), chile also denotes a thick, spicy, un-vinegared sauce, which is available in red and green varieties and which is often served over most New Mexican cuisine.
- Chilli was the original Romanization of the Náhuatl language word for the fruit (chīlli)[21] and is the preferred British spelling according to the Oxford English Dictionary, although it also lists chile and chili as variants. This spelling is discouraged by some, since it would be pronounced differently in Spanish, into which it was first Romanized.
The name of the plant bears no relation to
Chile, the country, which is named after the
Quechua chin ("cold"),
tchili ("snow"), or
chilli ("where the land ends"). Chile is one of the Spanish-speaking countries where chilis are known as
ají, a word of
Taíno origin.
There is also some disagreement about whether it is proper to use the word
pepper when discussing chili peppers because
pepper originally referred to the genus
Piper, not Capsicum. Despite this dispute, a sense of
pepper referring to Capsicum is supported by English dictionaries, including the Oxford English Dictionary (sense 2b of
pepper) and
Merriam-Webster.
[22] Furthermore, the word
pepper is commonly used in the botanical and culinary fields in the names of different types of chili peppers.
Possible health benefits
All hot chili peppers contain
phytochemicals known collectively as capsaicinoids.
- Capsaicin was shown, in laboratory settings, to cause cancer cell death in rats.[23]
- Capsaicin in chilies has been found to inhibit chemically induced carcinogenesis and mutagenesis in various animal models and cell culture systems.[24]
- Recent research in mice shows that chili (capsaicin in particular) may offer some hope of weight loss for people suffering from obesity.[25][26]
- Researchers used capsaicin from chilies to kill nerve cells in the pancreases of mice with Type 1 diabetes, thus allowing the insulin producing cells to start producing insulin again.[27][28]
- Research in humans found that "after adding chili to the diet, the LDL, or bad cholesterol, actually resisted oxidation for a longer period of time, [delaying] the development of a major risk for cardiovascular disease".[29][30]
- Researchers found that the amount of insulin required to lower blood sugar after a meal is reduced if the meal contains chili pepper.[31]
- Chili peppers are being probed as a treatment for alleviating chronic pain.[32][33]
- Spices, including chili, are theorized to control the microbial contamination levels of food in countries with minimal or no refrigeration.[34]
- Hot peppers are claimed to provide symptomatic relief from rhinitis, but a review study found no effect.[35]
- Several studies found that capsaicin could have an anti-ulcer protective effect on stomachs infected with H. pylori by affecting the chemicals the stomach secretes in response to infection.[36][37][38]
- By combining an anesthetic with capsaicin, researchers can block pain in rat paws without causing temporary paralysis. This anesthetic may one day allow patients to be conscious during surgery and may also lead to the development of more effective chronic pain treatments.[39][40]
Possible health risks and precautions
References
- ^ "HORT410. Peppers - Notes". Purdue University Department of Horticulture and Landscape Architecture. http://www.hort.purdue.edu/rhodcv/hort410/pepper/pe00001.htm. Retrieved 20 October 2009. "Common name: pepper. Latin name: Capsicum annuum L. ... Harvested organ: fruit. Fruit varies substantially in shape, pericarp thickness, color and pungency."
- ^ Perry, L. et al. 2007. Starch fossils and the domestication and dispersal of chili peppers (Capsicum spp. L.) in the Americas. Science 315: 986-988. Link.
- ^ BBC News Online. 2007. Chillies heated ancient cuisine. Friday, 16 February. Available from: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/6367299.stm. Accessed 16 February 2007.
- ^ Bosland, P.W. 1996. Capsicums: Innovative uses of an ancient crop. p. 479-487. In: J. Janick (ed.), Progress in new crops. ASHS Press, Arlington, VA.
- ^ Heiser Jr., C.B. 1976. Pp. 265-268 in N.W. Simmonds (ed.). Evolution of Crop Plants. London: Longman.
- ^ Eshbaugh, W.H. 1993. Pp. 132-139 in J. Janick and J.E. Simon (eds.). New Crops. New York: Wiley.
- ^ Collingham, Elizabeth (2006). Curry. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-09-943786-4.
- ^ Hjelmqvist, Hakon. "Cayennepeppar från Lunds medeltid". Svensk Botanisk Tidskrift, vol 89: pp. 193-.
- ^ S Kosuge, Y Inagaki, H Okumura (1961). Studies on the pungent principles of red pepper. Part VIII. On the chemical constitutions of the pungent principles. Nippon Nogei Kagaku Kaishi (J. Agric. Chem. Soc.), 35, 923–927; (en) Chem. Abstr. 1964, 60, 9827g.
- ^ (ja) S Kosuge, Y Inagaki (1962) Studies on the pungent principles of red pepper. Part XI. Determination and contents of the two pungent
- ^ Journal of Biological Chemistry, 2008, 283, 21418
- ^ Hot News about Chili Peppers, Chemical & Engineering News, 86, 33, 18 Aug. 2008, p. 35
- ^ http://www.tribo.org/vegetables/dahongsili.html tribo.org
- ^ Untitled Document
- ^ Paul Rozin1 and Deborah Schiller (1980). "The nature and acquisition of a preference for chili pepper by humans". Motivation and Emotion 4 (1): 77–101. doi:10.1007/BF00995932.
- ^ [1]
- ^ Tewksbury, J. J. and G. P. Nabhan. 2001. Directed deterrence by capsaicin in chillies. Nature412:403-404.
- ^ John Roach (11 August 2008). "Fungus Puts the Heat in Chili Peppers, Study Says". Discover Magazine. http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2008/08/080811-chili-bugs.html. Retrieved 2008-08-13.
- ^ State Symbols - Texas State Library
- ^ Heiser, Charles (1990). Seed To Civlization: The Story of Food. Cambridge: Harvard University Press. ISBN 0-67-479681-0.
- ^ A Brief History of Chilies : Kakawa Chocolate House, Mesoamerican Mayan Aztec Drinking Chocolate, Historic European and Colonial American Drinking Chocolate, Truffles and More
- ^ va=pepper - Definition from the Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary
- ^ Athanasiou A, Smith PA, Vakilpour S, et al. (2007). "Vanilloid receptor agonists and antagonists are mitochondrial inhibitors: how vanilloids cause non-vanilloid receptor mediated cell death". Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 354 (1): 50–5. doi:10.1016/j.bbrc.2006.12.179. PMID 17214968.
- ^ [2]
- ^ Hsu CL, Yen GC (2007). "Effects of capsaicin on induction of apoptosis and inhibition of adipogenesis in 3T3-L1 cells". J. Agric. Food Chem. 55 (5): 1730–6. doi:10.1021/jf062912b. PMID 17295509.
- ^ extract may stop fat cell growth By Stephen Daniells 3/1/2007
- ^ Razavi R, Chan Y, Afifiyan FN, et al. (2006). "TRPV1+ sensory neurons control beta cell stress and islet inflammation in autoimmune diabetes". Cell 127 (6): 1123–35. doi:10.1016/j.cell.2006.10.038. PMID 17174891.
- ^ Chili extract makes diabetes go awayDecember 15, 2006 The Vancouver Sun
- ^ Chili peppers can improve your health 9/9/2007 Daily Herald
- ^ Ahuja KD, Ball MJ (2006). "Effects of daily ingestion of chilli on serum lipoprotein oxidation in adult men and women". Br. J. Nutr. 96 (2): 239–42. doi:10.1079/BJN20061788. PMID 16923216.
- ^ "Blood sugar and spice Science News - Find Articles". http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1200/is_7_170/ai_n16690548. Retrieved 2007-09-19.
- ^ "BBC NEWS". 2006-06-30. http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/4993576.stm. Retrieved 2007-09-19.
- ^ "Great Moments in Science - Chilli - Nuclear Food 3". http://www.abc.net.au/science/k2/moments/s341437.htm. Retrieved 2007-09-19.
- ^ Billing J, Sherman PW (1998). "Antimicrobial functions of spices: why some like it hot". The Quarterly review of biology 73 (1): 3–49. doi:10.1086/420058. PMID 9586227.
- ^ Cheng J, Yang XN, Liu X, Zhang SP (2006). "Capsaicin for allergic rhinitis in adults". Cochrane Database Syst Rev (2): CD004460. doi:10.1002/14651858.CD004460.pub2. PMID 16625604.
- ^ Lee IO, Lee KH, Pyo JH, Kim JH, Choi YJ, Lee YC (2007). "Anti-inflammatory effect of capsaicin in Helicobacter pylori-infected gastric epithelial cells". Helicobacter 12 (5): 510–7. doi:10.1111/j.1523-5378.2007.00521.x. PMID 17760719.
- ^ Satyanarayana MN (2006). "Capsaicin and gastric ulcers". Critical reviews in food science and nutrition 46 (4): 275–328. doi:10.1080/1040-830491379236. PMID 16621751.
- ^ O'Mahony R, Al-Khtheeri H, Weerasekera D, et al. (2005). "Bactericidal and anti-adhesive properties of culinary and medicinal plants against Helicobacter pylori". World J. Gastroenterol. 11 (47): 7499–507. PMID 16437723.
- ^ Binshtok AM, Bean BP, Woolf CJ (2007). "Inhibition of nociceptors by TRPV1-mediated entry of impermeant sodium channel blockers". Nature 449 (7162): 607–10. doi:10.1038/nature06191. PMID 17914397.
- ^ "Using Hot Chili Peppers To Relieve Pain". CBS News. 2007. http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2007/10/03/health/webmd/main3327165.shtml. Retrieved 2007-10-20.
- ^ Mathew A, Gangadharan P, Varghese C, Nair MK (2000). "Diet and stomach cancer: a case-control study in South India". Eur. J. Cancer Prev. 9 (2): 89–97. doi:10.1097/00008469-200004000-00004. PMID 10830575.
- ^ López-Carrillo L, López-Cervantes M, Robles-Díaz G, et al. (2003). "Capsaicin consumption, Helicobacter pylori positivity and gastric cancer in Mexico". Int. J. Cancer 106 (2): 277–82. doi:10.1002/ijc.11195. PMID 12800206.
- ^ Archer VE, Jones DW (2002). "Capsaicin pepper, cancer and ethnicity". Med. Hypotheses 59 (4): 450–7. doi:10.1016/S0306-9877(02)00152-4. PMID 12208187.
- ^ López-Carrillo L, Hernández Avila M, Dubrow R (1994). "Chili pepper consumption and gastric cancer in Mexico: a case-control study". Am. J. Epidemiol. 139 (3): 263–71. PMID 8116601.
- ^ Gajda J, Switka A, Kuźma K, Jarecka J (2006). "[Sudan and other illegal dyes--food adulteration]" (in Polish). Roczniki Państwowego Zakładu Higieny 57 (4): 317–23. PMID 17713194.
- ^ Johnson, Wilbur (2007). "Final report on the safety assessment of capsicum annuum extract, capsicum annuum fruit extract, capsicum annuum resin, capsicum annuum fruit powder, capsicum frutescens fruit, capsicum frutescens fruit extract, capsicum frutescens resin, and capsaicin". Int. J. Toxicol. 26 Suppl 1: 3–106. doi:10.1080/10915810601163939. PMID 17365137.
- ^ Fazekas B, Tar A, Kovács M (2005). "Aflatoxin and ochratoxin A content of spices in Hungary". Food additives and contaminants 22 (9): 856–63. doi:10.1080/02652030500198027. PMID 16192072.
- ^ Vrabcheva TM (2000). "[Mycotoxins in spices]" (in Russian). Voprosy pitaniia 69 (6): 40–3. PMID 11452374.
- ^ Reddy SV, Mayi DK, Reddy MU, Thirumala-Devi K, Reddy DV (2001). "Aflatoxins B1 in different grades of chillies (Capsicum annum L.) in India as determined by indirect competitive-ELISA". Food additives and contaminants 18 (6): 553–8. doi:10.1080/02652030010025383. PMID 11407753.
- ^ Tricker AR, Siddiqi M, Preussmann R (1988). "Occurrence of volatile N-nitrosamines in dried chillies". Cancer Lett. 38 (3): 271–3. doi:10.1016/0304-3835(88)90018-3. PMID 3349447.
- ^ Milke P, Diaz A, Valdovinos MA, Moran S (2006). "Gastroesophageal reflux in healthy subjects induced by two different species of chili (Capsicum annum)". Digestive diseases (Basel, Switzerland) 24 (1-2): 184–8. doi:10.1159/000090323. PMID 16699276.
- ^ Agarwal MK, Bhatia SJ, Desai SA, Bhure U, Melgiri S (2002). "Effect of red chillies on small bowel and colonic transit and rectal sensitivity in men with irritable bowel syndrome". Indian journal of gastroenterology : official journal of the Indian Society of Gastroenterology 21 (5): 179–82. PMID 12416746.
- ^ Rajaratnam SS, Boyle N, Owen WJ (2001). "'Always chew your chillies': a report of small bowel obstruction with perforation". Int. J. Clin. Pract. 55 (2): 146. PMID 11321857.
- ^ Gupta PJ (2007). "Red Hot Chili Consumption Is Harmful in Patients Operated for Anal Fissure - A Randomized, Double-Blind, Controlled Study". Digestive Surgery 24 (5): 354–357. doi:10.1159/000107716. PMID 17785979.
External links
| Herbs and spices |
|
|
|
|
|
Spices |
|
Ajwain (bishop's weed) · Aleppo pepper · Alligator pepper · Allspice · Amchur (mango powder) · Anise · Aromatic ginger · Asafoetida · Camphor · Caraway · Cardamom · Charoli · Cardamom, black · Cassia · Cayenne pepper · Celery seed · Chenpi · Chili · Cinnamon · Clove · Coriander seed · Cubeb · Cumin · Cumin, black · Dill & dill seed · Fennel · Fenugreek · Fingerroot (krachai) · Galangal, greater · Galangal, lesser · Garlic · Ginger · Golpar · Grains of Paradise · Grains of Selim · Horseradish · Juniper berry · Kaempferia galanga (kencur) · Kokum · Lime, black · Liquorice · Litsea cubeba · Mace · Mahlab · Malabathrum (tejpat) · Mustard, black · Mustard, brown · Mustard, white · Nigella (kalonji) · Nutmeg · Paprika · Peppercorn (black, green & white) · Pepper, long · Radhuni · Rose · Pepper, Brazilian · Pepper, Peruvian · Pomegranate seed (anardana) · Poppy seed · Salt · Saffron · Sarsaparilla · Sassafras · Sesame · Sichuan pepper (huājiāo, sansho) · Star anise · Sumac · Tasmanian pepper · Tamarind · Tonka bean · Turmeric · Vanilla · Wasabi · Zedoary · Zereshk · Zest
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Lists of herbs and spices |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|