The Scoville Scale. See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scoville_scale
yes it does sometimes but does not if the chilli is too much or has concentrates
I guess that you have put too much chilli powder or chilli peppers into your chilli. The trith is that you can't do anything about to much chilli. the only thing is by diluting the chilli down with more sauce or add veg. Another way which is an old wives tale is to add a potatoe. this is supposed to absorb the acids causing the hotness.
YES
did you mean to say:are peppers and chilli peppers fruit or veg?if it is,then fruit,because:1.it has seeds2.it forms from the swollen ovary surrounding the seeds
A parrot eg (cockatoos, conure, macaws, etc) can have chilli peppers at any age from the time they start eating till they get old. Chilli peppers are not hot for parrots as parrots have no saliva so they can not taste how hot the chilli pepper is. Chilli peppers also help the parrot with mimicking human voice(speaking.)
Yes. Chilli peppers were actually 'domesticated' in Mexico.
chilli! dumb a#$
Red chilies are generally hotter than green chilies. Red chilies have the most capsaicin, so they are more intense and longer lasting than green chilies. The red and green chili peppers have one thing in common: they're both popular peppers around the world.
No, but you can try using sugar with a dish you're making with chilli. I have tried it before, it works for me, but maybe try it for yourselves. ;)
No. Chilli powder is made from peppers.
Harissa
Anthony Kiedis