Buldak spicy noodles are back on shelves in Denmark after the food authorities there canceled part of their recall decision concerning the famous Korean instant noodles product, originally issued due to their extreme spiciness and consequent health risks.
Buldak spicy noodles are back on shelves in Denmark after the food authorities there canceled part of their recall decision concerning the famous Korean instant noodles product, originally issued due to their extreme spiciness and consequent health risks.
The Danish Veterinary and Food Administration announced, Monday (local time), that two of the three products that had been recalled were not harmful to health, based on updated risk assessments.
"Based on the new analysis results and the DTU Food Institute's updated risk assessment, the administration concludes that two of the products, Samyang Buldak 2x Spicy Hot Chicken and Samyang Buldak Hot Chicken Stew, do not contain capsaicin levels as high as those reported by the distributors in the marketing," the Danish administration said in a press release.
According to the report, the capsaicin levels were calculated based on the Scoville scale information disclosed on Danish retail websites selling the noodles, rather than the noodles themselves, as no specific measurements of capsaicin or total capsaicin content are provided by the manufacturer.
Notice the ban was based on the information given by the dealers themselves.
When the actual lab results came back it turned out to be not quite as strong as advertised.
So I guess it's false advertising, but that's probably another department.
According to the report, the capsaicin levels were calculated based on the Scoville scale information disclosed on Danish retail websites selling the noodles, rather than the noodles themselves, as no specific measurements of capsaicin or total capsaicin content are provided by the manufacturer.
However, the Danish authorities maintained the recall decision on Buldak 3x Spicy Hot Chicken, the spiciest product in the Buldak line, stating that it is still believed to be harmful to health. They cited the high capsaicin level as posing a risk to consumers developing acute poisoning upon consumption.
Wow. I had no idea the Danes were such wussies. Too spicy. Lol
*I stand by what I said. The 2x and 3x are not very terrible on the spicy scale. The article claims the 3x is around 13,000 shu. I'm actually guessing that's a typo/mistake and it's supposed to be 130,000 SHU. Jalapeños are usually around 10,000 to 20,000 and the noodles are hotter than that. Serrano peppers float around 90k or so. Habanero peppers are usually 150k or more. Peppers vary wildly based on growing conditions.
I eat them all the time, but I'm a freak of nature that uses hot sauces like mad dog 357 gold edition and da bomb on all my food. I think jalapeños to me are about as spicy to pickles for most people.
Sriracha red is about the most you can throw at people not accustomed to spiciness before they get more than mildly uncomfortable, that is, people who actually still taste all of it, haven't build a tolerance. That's about 3000 scoville.
Yes, people eat jalapenos over here. With other stuff. Habaneros? Only people eating those pure are people thinking they look cool doing it.
Also, IMNSHO, nothing above about 10000 should be eaten without Szechuan pepper. And you can definitely start adding it as low as 2000.
Maybe this is a clickbait-type thing, so scrapers will drive more content to the article while it itself remains serious and professional-looking?
Edit: It does look like it loads it for sharing purposes, at least onto Facebook and the like. Not sure how it worked for Lemmy specifically. Maybe an actual web dev can answer.
You don't have to use the same image for the feature as the embed preview. The featured image is often the default (and you have a fallback just in case), but you can also choose to replace it for socials. Don't know what this is built in (on mobile) but it could just be using a different file.
I haven't seen this before so grain of salt but I'm assuming it's just to be eye-catching so you click to their site. I'm also assuming you wouldn't want it to be a gif on your own site because of accessibility concerns, but that depends on your requirements which vary pretty widely by country.
Man I'm all for spicy but there's a point for me when I can't even enjoy the flavor that just kills it. As much as I want to love them, I haven't found a version that isn't 'light you life on fire' hot.
A coworker of mine introduced me to these about five or six years ago, when they could only be acquired in specialty Asian grocery stores. Now I can get them at Shaws and I fuckin love them. I've got three packs in my pantry at the moment. They're best if you add microwaved chicken nuggets to them.
I actually tried a pack after seeing the previous article and recognizing them in the store. So news article marketing worked.
They're really spicy though. To a level where it's no longer enjoyable. On my second pack I only added 1/3 the included sauce and it was far better. I was used to Nissin packets of Soba-chili noodles and loved those. These Buldak packs are like 4-5 times as spicy.
Buldak is a bit too spicy for me to enjoy. But Nongshim Shin Ramyun is much better tasting, and highly recommend for those that like spicy noodles that aren't pure fire.
Someone got the 3x spicy buldak where I work and it’s hot as fuck. I didn’t know there was a 3x version, the 2x was already hotter than I like. Still had to try it.
Its only 13000 Scoville. Some people consider that medium. A Chipotle pepper is like 10,000, serano 20 thousand. I've been known to make chipotle sandwiches. It's not really a toughness thing, it's a skin thickness deal, plus acclimatization
I got some buldak instant noodles to try. They are very very spicy. Ive definitely been served spicier foods at restaurants, but i dont think ive ever had a spicier instant ramen packet
Speaking of, Scovilles should generally be listed on packaging, also, when you buy raw chillis, some approximate number of what you can expect. At least for stuff over what 500 or so.
Their tamest ones have ~9000, that's 3x red Sriracha meanwhile there's other products on the shelves where "extra hot" means 2000 SCU no wonder people are calling poison hotlines.
Scoville units are also not a very good method of measuring spiciness (not that I have a better one). Ime I've eaten a variety of things at a variety of Scoville levels and I've found some of the lower ones way, way hotter than some of the higher ones. I've had many, many, many high/extra/killmepls strength hot sauces but still believe a homegrown ghost pepper to be the hottest thing I've ever eaten.
Fat tends to reduce heat perception (capsaicin is lipophilic), and then there's stuff like Szechuan pepper which manages to balance out heat by stimulating the movement sensors. A raw ghost pepper certainly doesn't come with either. Also parts of that thing will be way hotter than others, for the whole thing to have an average of what 1M SCU the pith near the stalk needs to be absolute hellfire. Protip: Always try the very tip first, if it's making you spit fire you don't want to eat the rest :)
Idk if mine is better but my method is to pay attention to the peppers used (and avoid anything with that fake capsicum bullshit), and just trial and error. After a while you get pretty good at reading it and seeing "oh bhut jolokia, cool. Oooh trinidad brown scorpion, this one will be hot" etc. Tbf though I can eat sauce made with reapers so it's less of a concern for me, I just can't do the fake shit, it tastes like garbage and reapers are plenty hot I don't need the lies.
Lee Nong Shim spicy are the best though. I don't like their Black variety, but standard red spicy rock. I've a feeling they're a connected brand or a relabel.
Naw Nongshim and Samyang are different companies. Samyang is actually the first instant ramen company in SK, while Nongshim is the largest instant noodles company in SK. Completely different ramens too, Nongshim's is powder/veg packet, Samyang's is a red ass hot sauce packet (well, for their flagship, they have more flavors). And Samyang is much hotter, but they're both good!
White nations need to quit confusing hotness with spiciness, except those that are actually complaining about spiciness. Those just need shut the fuck up. Source: I'm white.
As far as I can tell it speaks neither of hotness nor spicyness but just concentration of Capsaicin, so those terms must have been introduced to the article by the Korea Times instead...
I'm pretty sure average Danish horseradish would kill your usual WASP. And don't get me started on that abomination Americans call mustard. Or alioli.
Go, go ahead, take a bulb of garlic, remove the sprouts, put them in pestle and mortar and mush them through with some good olive oil and salt until you have a nice emulsion. Taste the result and dare again to speak about "white people and spice". Nope, it's American puritans who invented corn flakes and Graham crackers so people would stop masturbating.
That was just John kellog and you also.need to shut up, that's neither a rebuttal or relevant, just a npc response. I'm not American, dumbass. Btw, you don't seem to know the difference between mortar and seive.