Spicy food never has an effect on me once it's done burning my mouth.
Maybe there were a few times that it felt a little spicy coming out, but that's very rare.
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Spicy food never has an effect on me once it's done burning my mouth.
Maybe there were a few times that it felt a little spicy coming out, but that's very rare.
Yeah I've never had issues with spicy foods causing anything but mouth feels and I've tried sauces like the last dab (not often but I tried their nugget w/ 3 sauces they had in the freezer section)
I get heart burn more from sugary shit it seems.
How old are you? I used to be like you. I still hold the spice tolerance. I recently ate a spicy chicken burger they made me sign a waiver for because of how spicy it is. My body handled it okay. While I didn't get diarrhea, my gut's complaining.
32 and I've been into spicy food since I was like 20 lol
You’ve got a limited amount of years before it changes. It might not be dramatic, but you’ll reach a point where things start catching up with you.
ok now I'm definitely treating myself to a curry tonight lol, I'm gonna milk this blessing for all it's worth 😂
My man! Im 32 as well and have been feeling a bit worse for wear, it couldnt be all the alcohol right?, and some nice spicy curry sounds delicious for tonight.
You know what? I forgot to account for the alcohol. You'll probably be fine for a lot of years. I'm not the average person when it comes to that and I definitely noticed a lot of other changes to my health when I sobered up for a month last year. Having a convo with a friend about how we don't heal as quickly as we did in our twenties probably distorted my thinking a bit.
idk i'm pushing 5 decades and i ferment my own habanero hot sauce cuz i can't buy anything hotter. I eat gochujang with pretty much everything. The only time i have ever suffered from hot things is when i ate one of those One Chip Challenges. I usually stay away from capsaicin extracts/concentrations but my kid wanted to do it. My stomach hurt for about 30 minutes then stopped, that was the extent of it!
This is the answer. I would put the 'nuclear death in a bottle' type sauces on everything in my 20s. Switched to more normal hot sauce in my 30s. Since 40, even that has to be done in moderation. My fridge is full of hot sauces gifted to me that I won't touch, but the extended family still thinks I like.
Most of the gastrointestinal distress from capsaicin is the result of poison countermeasures triggered by contact pain signals.
But capsaicin is telling your cells a lie which fewer believe each re-telling, so it requires increasingly ridiculous doses to trigger those internal signals.
If you eat spicy food regularly, you likely won’t get any internal signals again until you graduate to a different category of spiciness, such as extracts.
Hot sauce nerds consider extracts cheating, since you can achieve heat that’s many orders of magnitude above what the hottest pepper hybrids can produce, but do what you must to feel alive.
Oh, and in case you’re looking for recommendations, my current daily driver is Blair’s “Ultra Death.”
To set expectations, Tobasco (a common North American vinegar-based chili sauce) has a heat rating of 7,000 scovilles, whereas Ultra Death generally measures over 1 million.
If you like heat, extracts are a cost-effective step up, since each bottle lasts longer. At first anyway.
There's a few factors.
First is genetics. Not everyone has the same base level reaction to peppers and/or capsaicin. And it can be either of them causing intestinal rebellion. Some people just don't respond well to even sweet peppers.
Second is habitation. The more spicy stuff you eat in general, the more your body adapts to it.
But, there's also variances in mucosa. Our guts, the colon in specific, opportunists produce snot. It's essentially the same as what coats your throat and sinuses. Not exactly the same, but the same basic ingredients and purpose. Separate from how you respond to the food, and how used to it you are, some people produce more than others.
In your case, I suspect that you have a higher resistance genetically, and produce mucous in your gut that protects you from the irritants that spicy foods have.
If you also have a healthy gut biome going, it'll add a layer of resistance to things being over stimulated.
And that's what causes the diarrhea and cramping for most people. The chemicals irritate tissues, so your body treats or like an emergency. That means to increase bowel motility and flush the guts with water. Which means squiiirt.
I share this blessing. I'm still confused by how exactly people are tasting how spicy their precious meal was when it's on the way back out.
I used to live in New Mexico for a while and there was a common joke: how do you tell if someone is a native New Mexican? They keep a fire extinguisher in the bathroom.
It's not so much that you taste it on the way out, it's that there's undigested capsaicin that burns, uh, other mucus membranes on the way out. Fortunately not something that bothers me much either, but I get hints of it sometimes when my niece makes what I call her nuclear fire curry.
The uhh, simplified version, is that the way out has the same reciptors as the way in when it comes to spiciness.
Most people have taste receptors in their gut as well as on their tongue. It helps regulate how quickly your muscles contract to move stuff along through your intestine.
Some people don’t have as many, and some people build up a tolerance to capsaicin (in both their mouth and gut).
Capsaicin trigger nociceptors, tricking the brain into believing you’ve hurt yourself. It’s not a flavour.
I use obscene amounts of Tabasco. The only thing it does to my gut is that my stomach can become a bit too acidic.
What were things like for you pre-tabasco?
Pretty basic, I'd assume.
and that's not a lye
How do you expect them to remember being in the womb?
So like, I think it’s less to do with spiciness, and more to do with certain ingredients that people’s bodies aren’t used to, or even might have a negative reaction to.
Might also be that spicyness essentially is lowering the threshold that heat sensing nerves fire at till it’s below ambient body temperature, maybe, if someone not used to hot food it tricks the intestines in to thinking they’ve been burnt and releasing water as a sort of wound response? Maybe? IDK.
Was very happy to eat spicy foods until mid-late 40s, when I had to moderate because something just spontaneously switched as I got older and now my GI tract is unhappy if I eat a vindaloo, godfuckingdamnit.
I'm worried this is happening to me right now. I'm in my mid-40s and lately the day after all the spicy foods I usually consume have not been pleasant. Is there no fix for this??
Sucks bro. I mean, I can still tolerate what most people consider to be spicy food. At least “white guy” spicy. But no, I can’t eat the same kind of spicy food that I used to enjoy. It’s just a natural thing as you get older. This is a well known phenomenon. No fix.
Acidic foods effect my belly more. Tons of tomato sauce, for example, and I get some acid reflux.
But spicy? Bring it on.
Boring ass comment, but same. I’m 36 and can’t stop eating spicy foods.
As somebody who's stomach is SEVERELY affected by spicy food, I suspect that you're just a statistical outlier, like myself. Don't sweat it. Instead, lean in. Be the "I can eat anything spicy and be fine" guy amongst your friends.
I was unbothered by it as well, at least intestinally, the physical pain of something hot enough was certainly something I could experience and dislike at the extreme end but my stomach and bowels would have been fine. That it until about the past 5 years or so when my stomach suddenly decided it couldn't handle all kind of things that were never a problem before and now I totally get what people were talking about. It's pretty sad, I miss being able to reliably tolerate highly spicy food.
I've heard people say that things are spicy on the way out but i don't really understand what that means. Spicy doesn't bother me, but greasy, smoky, and dairy kill my stomach.
Your anus can feel capsaicin. It's not 100% of the time for me, but sometimes after eating a spicy meal, the next poop burns like a mofo.
Probably depends a fair but on what else you eat with it. Like how drinking water doesn't help but milk does.
I couldn't say how common it is, but I'm a bit jealous. I love spicy food but I definitely suffer the consequences. Not usually in the feeling it on the way out but in the irregular movements department.
And it's not even about having something too spicy. Sometimes I eat something one day and I'm fine, but eat it a different day and and it wrecks me.
I have this talent as well; I use sriracha instead of ketchup on my burger and fries, with hot peppers.
But let me warn you, do not think this holds true when you have hemorrhoids. It will put you in a different universe of pain.
It supposed to affect your gut?
I only ever hear that in movies. I assumed it happens if you eat low grade meat or smth like in the wild west in the US back in the day and it just became an old wives' tale turned pop culture myth.
I do actually not like spicy food though, especially Chinese and Indian, but I've had enough of it to know I never had any gut issues.
I love spicy foods and they don't upset my stomach. Though I did eat one of those "one chip challenge" things back in the day and I did fine at the time but the next two days or so I felt like I had been poisoned. Only time that ever happened to me. You probably have a threshold too but it's just very high. Genetics and practice helps, your gut biome critters are probably used to it too.
I've found that as I get older, my guy is more affected by got stuff with seeds. The more seeds, the more irritated my belly gets.
I'm the same as you. No issues at all. Wasn't till maybe 5 years ago I even got a minor tingle on my butthole.
As others have said, it started around my mid thirty’s. That also happens to be when I started growing my own ghost peppers… hmm. There is a big difference between a few slugs of a hot sauce and something truly marinated in heat. I have had a few spicy chicken sandwiches that you have sign a waiver (marketing bs) that have had the effect, but were surprisingly not that bad going in. Anyway. Up your game if you can’t feel it yet. If your mouth can still feel anything, you’re not hot yet. You should reach beyond the sweat and start feeling a pleasant dizzy feeling and no feeling in your mouth anymore.
For me, some spices that involve oils or the seeds can give my gut a punch. For example, I like jalapeños for flavor, but too much and my gut doesn't like it. Hotter peppers use less of the pepper for spice, so they don't crank up the digestion. Some other spices don't have any effect whatsoever, like dried red pepper can make my mouth burn but never upset the stomach.
I think most of it is what your body is used to, as eating more hot stuff makes it a lot less likely for my stomach to revolt about the jalepenos. But if I take a month off I'm rolling the dice.
Maybe you just have a healthy gut. It’ll get me usually but I’ve gotten in the habit of having some yogurt or kefir afterwards and that neutralizes things in my gut so it doesn’t burn on its way out
Same! A few days ago I consumed a very spicy hot pot meal. It was spicy enough that my eyes were watering uncontrollably and I might not have eaten it except that I do not have much money and I'd already paid for the thing (and there's also my occasionally problematic waste aversion but I digress). In the days since I've been hoping to experience some toilet spice but it just hasn't happened! I wonder if I'll get to experience it if I get older?
Yeah I love spicy food and my body handles it like any other.
I think its one of those things where we have some gigachad gene that allows us to enjoy it like milk/dairy.
Doesn't affect me either, idk
I was like you, until my mid-30s hit
Now buffalo wings will have me waking up at 3am with acid reflux even though I didn't even register spice while I was eating them 6 hours earlier