🌶️ Ignite your taste buds with the ultimate ghost pepper thrill!
Psycho Juice 70% Ghost Pepper Hot Chilli Sauce delivers an intense, natural heat experience with 70% Naga Jolokia peppers. Packaged in a 148 ml bottle, this sauce boasts a heat level of 10+, crafted from shade-grown peppers in Costa Rica, perfect for serious chili lovers seeking authentic, extract-free spice.
Package Dimensions | 20.1 x 6.6 x 5.7 cm; 310 g |
Manufacturer reference | PJ02 |
Product Name | Hot Chilli Sauce |
Volume | 148 Millilitres |
Units | 148.0 millilitre |
Serving Recommendation | 1 teaspoon |
Country of origin of primary ingredient(s) | Costa Rica |
Brand | Psycho Juice |
Cuisine | South Asian cuisine |
Age Range Description | 18+ |
Speciality | Cultivated in the shade |
Package Information | Bottle |
Manufacturer | Psycho Juice |
H**P
Hot stuff!
I bought this for my husband who loves hot as in spicy foods. It is too hot for me but great if you like HOT food. It smelled very nice and apparently tasted great. I was pleased with the quality of the sauce and thought that it was good value for money.
O**I
Great balance of heat and taste
I always keep coming back to this one. You can get hotter sauces than this but they usually taste awful, you can get tangier more flavourful sauces but they're never hot enough for me. This sauce is the best mix of heat and flavour that I've found and is pretty cheap.
G**L
Hot enough to kill your tape worm
Good for cooking and hot enough to kill your tape worm
D**V
Good value, highly recommended.
Managed to get through this in around a week and a half. Putting it on every evening meal.. Then having a tea spoon on its own just to taste it in all it's glory..I am somewhat addicted to this sort of thing. Does not disappoint and will give you the fix you're after!Comparable to 100% Pain but with more of that fresh garlic taste and less salt. A little thinner/fine and with less lumps. Plenty of heat but you can still taste the chillies in this.If it's too hot, have the same amount the next day, and the next day, and the next day..
J**J
They Should Rename This 'Emotional Rollercoaster in a Bottle'—My Taste Buds Have Seen Things
Let me set the scene: it was a regular Saturday night, and I thought I was brave. I mean, I've done hot sauces before—jalapeños, habaneros, even a dabble in a Trinidad Scorpion. But Psycho Juice 70% Ghost Pepper took me somewhere new. Somewhere spicy. Somewhere between sweat, tears, and out-of-body epiphanies.I opened the bottle, and the smell alone made me reconsider my life choices. But hey, what’s life without a little risk, right? So I poured a generous dab onto my taco, and BOOM—instant regret. My taste buds were like, "Bro, what did you just do to us?" Meanwhile, my ego screamed, "You’re fine, just breathe!" Spoiler: I was not fine, and breathing became a luxury. Honestly, I felt like a dragon—except the kind that desperately needed an ice bath instead of breathing fire triumphantly.It started with an innocent burn that escalated to full-scale, five-alarm FIRE. I kid you not, I went through an entire jug of milk, tried sucking on an ice cube, and even Googled "how to survive ghost pepper" at one point. Yet, even amidst the pain, there was flavour—an undeniable tang and a smoky depth that made me think, "Maybe... just maybe, I’ll do it again."But wait—there’s more. My partner watched my spicy breakdown and, in his infinite wisdom, decided to try it too. I’d never seen a grown adult beg a loaf of bread for mercy before, but there we were, experiencing the pain together, tears streaming down our faces, united in our love-hate relationship with this sauce. We bonded over the agony, which in hindsight was quite romantic in a we-might-die-together way.The craziest part? After the sweat dried and my taste buds forgave me (well, mostly), I found myself craving that burn again. The flavour is so good it pulls you back for more, like some fiery siren call that you know is going to hurt but is so worth it. It's like that toxic ex you know you should stay away from but... you just can't. Only this time, it's legal, bottled, and you willingly pay for it.All in all, this sauce is not for the faint-hearted. It’s for those who want to challenge their inner demons, see the face of spice itself, and come out on the other side—probably a little singed, but definitely victorious. Use cautiously, prank at your own risk, and remember: milk is your best friend.Highly recommend for thrill-seekers, spice fiends, or anyone who just likes to live on the edge (or needs a creative way to keep uninvited guests from eating all their food).
A**A
70% Ghost Pepper Hot Chilli Sauce
Favourite hot sauce so far, 70% ghost chilli is the perfect heat level for me
G**Y
The strongest sauce I have ever tasted!
How to Neutralize Hot Foods in the MouthThis Chilly sauce is the hottest I HAVE EVER TASTED! It really eats up your face from the inside out! as much as I was chewing on my own tongue before realizing to late and now I am without a tongue:-)This chilly sauce is so strong that i went ahead and pasted for you here HOW YOU CAN BEST NEUTRALIZE the CHILLY if it is too much what you can handle :-)It is common for people to experience pleasurable and even euphoriant effects from ingesting capsaicin. Folklore among self-described "chileheads" attributes this to pain-stimulated release of endorphins, a different mechanism from the local receptor overload that makes capsaicin effective as a topical analgesic. In support of this theory, there is some evidence that the effect can be blocked by naloxone and other compounds that compete for receptor sites with endorphins and opiates.Capsaicin is an alkaloid oil, which cannot be neutralized in water – which is why drinking a glass of ice water to try and drown out hot food is unsuccessful.Dairy products can reduce the heat of Capsaicin. A glass of milk or some yogurt. is one antidote that can be used if you have had too much spicy food. Dairy product work because one of proteins in dairy, called casein, helps break the bonds capsaicin forms on your nerve receptors .Capsaicin can also be neutralized by alcohol but the amount of alcohol in a beer may not be substantial enough. . A study in the 1990 edition of the “Journal of Physiology and Behavior” found that drinks with five percent ethanol did not work any better than cool water at neutralizing peppers’ heat. Higher concentrations of ethanol can be effective but should be served on ice since warm alcohol can increase the burn.Fatty food can also bind with the capsaicin and help relieve the pain. Think Avocado s... used to cut the spice in guacamole.
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