Why Pepper Seeds are Hot
What you need to know is that the characteristic pungency of chili peppers first originated as a deterrent.
Chilies, which in actual fact are fruits, do NOT want to be eaten at all. Or, at least, not by everyone. This phenomenon, which was discovered in the 60’s, is dubbed “directed deterrence” and indicates the capacity of some plants to select the animals they want their fruits to be eaten by so that the seeds can be scattered on the ground. And what other animal could be better at doing this than birds?
This is exactly why chilies have developed a content of capsaicin, a molecule that is detected by mammals. Once on the palate, it is detected by the vanilloid receptors, which provokes the sensation of piquancy we are all familiar with. If you guess that the idea that piquancy originally served as a deterrent because it is basically a sensation of pain, you are quite right. Chilies are hot because they do not want to be eaten by you!
Conversely, birds have no vanilloid receptors and experience no “unpleasant” sensation, but simply enjoy eating these little fruits and, since they do not digest the seeds… well let’s just say that they contribute to scattering them from a height.
According to the variety
According to the variety of chilli we are using, we come across different types of capsaicin. The most common type is the purest, capsaicin in fact, which has an astounding pungency level of 16 million of the Scoville scale.
Dihydrocapsaicin has a comparable level of pungency, while at a level of 9.2 million we find Nonivamide and at 9.1 million Nordihydrocapsaicin.
Fine, so we now know that capsaicin is responsible for that delicious “tingling” sensation. All we need to discover now is the exact amount of this substance in the chilli pepper.
Many studies have been carried out on the concentration of this molecule in the fruit and today the experts agree to the fact that it is accumulated in the so-called “placenta”, in other words the whitish parts the seeds are attached to. The seeds, owing to their conformation, are unlikely to absorb capsaicin, so their removal from the fruit does not mitigate the heat. The myth derives from the fact that when we deseed the chilli with a knife, we often remove part of the placenta as well.