Heat on Ice


Do you know the feeling you get when, after eating a bunch of really spicy foods, the outer fringes of your lips begin to burn?

Do you think there is any actual “heat” or is that just the standard confusion of “spicy hot” with “temperature hot”?

If you were to pour tomato sauce on ice in one cup and Tabasco on ice in another, would the Tabasco melt the ice more quickly?

7 comments

  1. there are thermometers that can measure the heat of foods. perhaps the heat increases as it meets or mixes with other foods.

  2. Ugh. Don’t eat Tabasco, unless it’s the chipotle version. Eat Cholula, Sriracha, or Louisiana hot sauce. Those are my holy trinity of hot sauces.

  3. @ Ashley

    I am with you. I don’t know exactly how to describe it, but to me Tabasco tastes almost metallic. Gross! I much prefer all three of the sauces you suggest.

    That said, I am fine with the idea of using Tabasco for science experiments!

  4. Capsaicin was a chemical that was originally used by plants to keep mammals from eating them (ironically). It doesn’t effect temperature directly, but changes the way nerve fibers react to temperature. Similar to the way aspartame makes you taste things sweeter.

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