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Glory to Marik
Midwest? Ranch dressing is considered spicy here.I consistently get offered ketchup at Mexican restaurants, which pains me greatly.![]()

Midwest? Ranch dressing is considered spicy here.I consistently get offered ketchup at Mexican restaurants, which pains me greatly.![]()
Southern California. But my ancestors are Northern European, so the assumption is clearly that encountering a chili pepper might be fatal. I have relatives who have a problem even with freshly ground black pepper, so I understand where these restaurants are coming from.Midwest? Ranch dressing is considered spicy here.![]()
I don't know if it's age or new allergy or what, but last few years I've become much more sensitive to spicy. Oddly, black pepper in particular is especially bad, and the absolute worst is the practically dustified pre-ground stuff; it's weapons-grade awful when snorted up the wrong hole.Southern California. But my ancestors are Northern European, so the assumption is clearly that encountering a chili pepper might be fatal. I have relatives who have a problem even with freshly ground black pepper, so I understand where these restaurants are coming from.
A question, as I polish off my drunken noodles:
How do I know what the typical spice level is of a cuisine that's not my native one?
I have a high tolerance for spiciness, and am interested in trying Thai and Indian food, etc., at their "right" levels. But I also know that dudebros asking to make stuff super-hot is incredibly common and they typically get stuff that's not at all typical of the cuisine, but just a bragging rights level of heat. (And I've won hot wing and chili eating contests, so I can do that, but it's not really what I want on a rainy day for lunch.)
When I've asked at restaurants, they just sort of shrug "it depends on the person" and want me to go ahead with my order.
As long as we all can agree that sherbert sucks.
This post breaks my heart. Good sherbet has been so hard to come by lately
The Thai place near where I work had a scale with points marked as "Hot" and "Thai Hot."Some version of this usually works...
"Is that white people spicy, or X spicy?"
Replace X with the whatever the ethnicity or cuisine is. That usually gets a laugh and native levels of spicy.
"Oh, that's spicy! What is it?"Midwest? Ranch dressing is considered spicy here.![]()
I want to know where each gets its 'cool' flavor"Oh, that's spicy! What is it?"
"Salt."