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Chilli Bugs Hot Sauces

Welcome to "Chilli Bugs Hot Sauces Limited" - we sell over 500 types of chilli sauces, chilli salsas, chilli pickles, chilli chocolate & sweets, fiery snacks, hot jams & peanut butters and smoky hot BBQ Sauces.

Everything from Mild.....to The Hottest in the World!

We hope you enjoy looking around our store - and if you would like to talk to us, please call our sales team on 01604 877007. We are always happy to answer any questions you may have.

 Bruce Brown

  

What is the Scoville Heat Scale?

The Scoville scale is a measure of the "hotness", or more correctly, piquancy, of a chili pepper. The scale is named after its creator, American chemist Wilbur Scoville.

These fruits of the Capsicum genus contain capsaicin, a chemical compound which stimulates thermoreceptor nerve endings in the skin, especially the mucus membranes, and the number of Scoville heat units (SHU) indicates the amount of capsaicin present. Many hot sauces use their Scoville rating in advertising as a selling point. The scale is named after its creator, chemist Wilbur Scoville.

Scoville's original method for testing hotness was called the Scoville Organoleptic Test, which he developed in 1912. As originally devised, a solution of the pepper extract is diluted in water until the "heat" is no longer detectable to a panel of (usually five) tasters; the degree of dilution gives its measure on the Scoville scale.

Thus a sweet pepper, containing no capsaicin at all, has a Scoville rating of zero, meaning no heat detectable even undiluted. Conversely, the hottest chiles, such as habaneros, have a rating of 300,000 or more, indicating that their extract has to be diluted 300,000-fold before the capsaicin present is undetectable. The greatest weakness of the Scoville Organoleptic Test is its imprecision, because it relies on human subjectivity.

Scoville Chile Heat Scale
Pepper & Extract Varieties Flame Rating Scoville Units
Sweet Bell Peppers; Sweet Banana; Pimento 0 - 100 Scoville Units
Mexican Bell; Cherry; New Mexico; Anaheim; Pepperoncini 100 - 1,000 Scoville Units
Ancho; Pasilla; Espanola; Anaheim 1,000 - 1,500 Scoville Units
Sandia; Cascabel, NuMex Big Jim 1,500 - 2,500 Scoville Units
Jalapeno; Mirasol; Chipotle; Poblano 2,500 - 5,000 Scoville Units
Yellow Wax; Serrano 5,000 - 15,000 Scoville Units
Chile de Arbol; Manzano 15,000 - 30,000 Scoville Units
Aji; Cayenne; Tabasco; Piquin 30,000 - 50,000 Scoville Units
Santaka; Chiltecpin; Thai 50,000 - 100,000 Scoville Units
Habanero; Scotch Bonnet; Bird's Eye; Jamaican Hot, Da' Bomb Ground Zero, You can't handle, Frostbite 100,000 - 350,000 Scoville Units

Red Savina Habanero; Indian Tezpur, Mad Dog 357, Blair's Mega Death, Blair's Jersey Death, Satan's Blood

350,000 - 855,000 Scoville Units
Dorset Naga 876,000 - 970,000 Scoville Units
Naga Jolokia Pepper 855,000 - 1,041,427 Scoville Units
Common Pepper Spray 2,000,000 Scoville Units
US Grade Police Pepper Spray 5,300,000 Scoville Units
Homodihydrocapsaicin 8,600,000 Scoville Units
Nordihydrocapsaicin 9,100,000 Scoville Units
Pepper Extracts, Blair's Reserve's, The Source 2 - 10,000,000 Scoville Units
Pure Capsaicin, Blair's 16 Million 15 - 16,000,000 Scoville Units