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- FOOD, Page 78Some Like it Hot
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- The virile chile -- the food that bites back -- has branded
- itself deep into America's palate
-
- By GUY GARCIA - With reporting by Nancy Harbert/Albuquerque and
- Georgia Harbison/New York
-
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- The stylish, well-heeled crowd packing the aisles of the
- second Santa Fe Wine and Chile Fiesta knew a hot trend when they
- saw it -- and tasted it. Between sips of Chardonnay, about
- 2,000 "chileheads" dressed in pepper-print shirts, skirts and
- ties spent four days sampling chile dishes, taking "chile
- tours" of the New Mexican countryside and listening to experts
- like Paul ("Mr. Chile") Bosland dispense advice on how to grow
- just about every member of the family, from the mild-mannered
- bell pepper to the Mexican habanero, the world's hottest. The
- chile mania "has really turned into a tiger," says Bosland, who
- has headed the chile-research program at New Mexico State
- University since 1985.
-
- America's infatuation with the once humble (and often
- shunned) chile has been fueled by a proliferation everywhere of
- Mexican and nouvelle Tex-Mex restaurants over the past decade
- and a growing public appetite for new flavor sensations. Last
- year sales of salsa, whose main ingredient is chile, surpassed
- catsup by $40 million, making it the country's most popular
- condiment. The peppers are popping up in such mainstream
- products as Le Menu "Santa Fe style" frozen dinners and
- McDonald's chicken fajitas. Manufacturers are packaging chile
- pastas, chile jams and jellies, chile catsup, chile-spiced
- mustards, peanuts, potato chips and pickles. There is even a
- sizzling rock band called the Red Hot Chili Peppers. "There are
- very few bad things about peppers," says David DeWitt, editor
- of Chile Pepper, a bimonthly magazine with a circulation of
- 80,000. "They have virtually no calories, no cholesterol, high
- fiber, high vitamin A and C content." As a result, says DeWitt,
- who will help put on a "Fiery Foods" show in Albuquerque, New
- Mexico, next February, chile has become a $3 billion industry
- in the U.S. alone.
-
- Inspired by -- and also instigating -- this heat wave are
- such adventurous and widely known chefs as Mark Miller of
- Washington's Red Sage and Josefina Howard of New York City's
- Rosa Mexicano, who regularly experiment with chile-flavored
- dishes like duck tamales with herb salsa, roasted oysters with
- green jalapeno strips and chile-laced chocolate cake. Amateur
- cooks have joined the craze with the help of more than 20
- cookbooks devoted exclusively to hot and spicy Mexican, Thai and
- Cajun foods. Mail-order outlets like Hot Stuff in New York City,
- Mo Hotta Mo Betta Co. in San Luis Obispo, California, and Hatch
- Chile Express in Hatch, New Mexico, sell fresh chile pods,
- powders and jars of salsa, as well as such kitschy
- pepperphernalia as chile-shaped fishing lures, earrings and
- ashtrays. "It used to be our customers would look confused and
- ask what they should do [with chile products]," says Chile
- Express owner Jo Lytle. "Now they know exactly what kind of
- chile they want and what strength."
-
- This hankering after the excitement offered by
- non-European dishes amounts to something like a kitchen
- rebellion, says journalist Amal Naj, whose book, Peppers: A
- Story of Hot Pursuits, has just gone into its second printing.
- "Americans are discovering that food doesn't have to be so
- passive," he remarks. "It can be an active experience like
- riding a roller coaster, or a good game of squash, or taking a
- stroll on a beautiful evening and experiencing the breeze. It
- does something to your entire system."
-
- The "something" that turns the human system into a
- four-alarm fire is capsaicin, a chemical concentrated in the
- veins and seeds of the chile pod. A member of the nightshade
- family (as are tomatoes, potatoes and tobacco), the chile pepper
- is believed to have originated in South America. Incas and
- Mayans prized it for its vibrant flavor and curative powers,
- prescribing peppers for ailments as diverse as arthritis,
- epilepsy and the common cold. Pepper seeds carried back to
- Europe by Christopher Columbus eventually found their way to
- China, Korea, Thailand and India -- the last of which today
- leads all other nations in per capita chile consumption.
-
- Among Americans, the most popular pepper is the innocuous
- bell, followed by the pimento, used in making paprika and
- stuffing olives, and the green jalapeno, common in nachos and
- green salsas. Chile connoisseurs also extol the virtues of such
- lesser-known varieties as the smoky chipotle, the fleshy
- red-brown poblano, the piquant pequin and the sweet-tasting
- habanero, which is famed, perhaps notorious, for its pure,
- blazing fire. In New Mexico, the chile-growing capital of the
- U.S., the longish local variety is often served stuffed with
- cheese or as a topping for hamburgers and pizza.
-
- The common belief among the pepperati nowadays is that a
- dose of hot chile, while not strictly medicinal, stimulates the
- senses and clears the mind, prodding the palate to the threshold
- between pleasure and pain. There are even some aficionados who
- tell of a "chile high," produced by the body's endorphins in
- reaction to the sting of the pepper pod.
-
- The best argument for chile, however, is that it is ideal
- for invigorating low-fat, potentially bland dishes and that it
- is healthful, plentiful and cheap. Peppers are also in tune
- with the nation's changing demographics. "For most of our early
- history," says Chile Pepper editor DeWitt, "immigration was from
- central Europe -- England, Ireland, Germany -- countries not
- renowned for their hot and spicy cuisines. In the past
- half-century, immigration patterns have switched to such areas
- as Mexico, Asia and the Caribbean. People bring their food, and
- they open their markets. We go, and we like them."
-
- Perhaps equally important is the fact that once bitten,
- most chile lovers keep coming back for more. "Hot peppers are
- here to stay," says Naj. "It's like people who are trying to
- learn swimming. You get them to the swimming pool, and they
- don't want to go into the water. Then once they're in it, they
- say, `Ahhh, not so bad.' " If Naj is right, it's only a matter
- of time before the rest of America takes the plunge.
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