4.7 Article

Variability in capsaicinoid content and Scoville heat ratings of commercially grown Jalapeno, Habanero and Bhut Jolokia peppers

Journal

FOOD CHEMISTRY
Volume 210, Issue -, Pages 606-612

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.foodchem.2016.04.135

Keywords

Capsaicin; Dihydrocapsaicin; Jalapeno; Habanero; Bhut Jolokia; Capsaicinoid; Market basket study; ANOVA; Bootstrap; Variation

Funding

  1. School of Mathematical and Natural Sciences at ASU West

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The variability of capsaicinoid content of three common, commercially-available hot pepper varieties, namely Jalapeno, Habanero and Bhut Jolokia, was investigated. For each variety tested, ten peppers were acquired from each of ten different suppliers resulting in 100 peppers per variety that were individually analyzed. The results showed that different pepper varieties had different distribution types. The Habanero peppers showed a normal distribution; the Bhut Jolokia showed a skewed distribution and the Jalapeno peppers showed a very skewed distribution. The source of variability was also different; the Habaneros were very consistent within a given pepper supplier so most of the overall variation resulted from differences between suppliers. The Jalapeno peppers were the exact opposite with a very high degree of variability within a given supplier and relatively low variation between suppliers. A bootstrap statistical simulation was conducted on the data to suggest a minimum number of peppers to analyze to characterize the variation in a population. The simulations indicated that small sample sizes are effective at estimating the mean concentrations, but a sample size of ten or more is necessary to describe the population and capture the high-end tail of the distributions, which are the very hottest peppers. (C) 2016 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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