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Infinity chili

Infinity chili pepper
Species Capsicum chinense
Breeder Nick Woods
Origin Grantham, Lincolnshire, England
Heat Exceptionally hot
Scoville scale 1,067,286 SHU

The Infinity Chili pepper is a chili pepper hybrid of the Capsicum chinense species created in England by chili breeder Nick Woods of Fire Foods, Grantham, Lincolnshire. For two weeks in February 2011, the Infinity Chili held the Guinness World Record title for the world's hottest chili with a Scoville scale rating of 1,067,286 Scoville Heat Units (SHU). On February 25, 2011, it was displaced by the Naga Viper pepper, which registered 1,382,118 SHU.

Woods created the Infinity Chili five years after starting growing chili peppers for his hot sauces; he was not attempting to breed a new variety but was growing his peppers in a greenhouse where crossbreeding between varieties happens readily; he described first trying his new pepper as "“When I tried it tasted nice at first, like an odd fruity taste, the effect is delayed. Then it hit me. All of a sudden I felt it burning in the back of my throat, so hot that I couldn't speak. I began to shake uncontrollably, I had to sit down, I felt physically sick. I really wouldn't recommend anybody eat it raw like that.”

A restaurant in Grantham called Bindi served a curry, called "The Widower", made with 20 infinity chilies and claimed to be the worlds hottest curry; after more than three hundred people had tried it, the first person to finish a dish of the curry was Dr. Ian Rothwell, who took just over an hour to finish the dish, including 10 minutes spent hallucinating due to the endorphin rush.

Testing of the chilli's Scoville rating was carried out at the University of Warwick's Crop Centre during March, 2010.

Both the tests for the Infinity Chili and the Naga Viper, also done at University of Warwick, were heavily criticized by respected pepper researchers; Dr. Dave DeWitt of The Chile Pepper Institute stated: "With one test, the most you can show is that a single pepper--or a part of a single pepper--had that heat rating. To establish that a variety of pepper is consistently the world's hottest, you need more than that.", even the researchers at the University of Warwick were surprised by both bestowals of worlds hottest pepper as they had thought that another independent verification and proof of cultivar stability would be needed. As it is possible to vary the heat within a strain by stressing the plant through various techniques such as selectively with-holding water and that five years is not sufficient enough time to breed a new cultivar, and especially not to stabilize it, the researchers and growers rejected the claims of both the Infinity pepper and the Naga Viper in favor of the Trinidad Scorpion.


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