The story appears on

Page A12

December 16, 2019

GET this page in PDF

Free for subscribers

View shopping cart

Related News

Home » Feature

Serbia snow can’t stop hot pepper cultivation

December snow flurries in Serbia haven’t stopped Aleksandar Tanic from cultivating his scorching-hot crop: the crinkly chili peppers that are considered to be the spiciest on the planet. 

At the base of a mountain in southern Serbia, Tanic plucks a handful of red, yellow and orange peppers from rows of leafy vines inside a greenhouse whose roof is blanketed with a layer of snow.

Among them is the Carolina Reaper, considered the hottest pepper out there, according to Guinness World Records. 

First developed in South Carolina, it boasts an average of 1.6 million heat units on the “Scoville scale” that measures capsaicin, the ingredient that gives peppers their firepower.

Despite Serbia’s wintry temperatures, Tanic says he has no problem growing the peppers in soil beneath Mount Koritnyak in the town of Niska Banja.

“We have a good climate here,” says the 36-year-old. “I don’t know why but the peppers are better and bigger and maybe even hotter here.”

Tanic first started researching peppers a few years back “out of a love for cooking and spicy food.” He began tasting varieties from the US, the Caribbean, South America and Asia that were far hotter than the red peppers used to make Serbia’s beloved ajvar spread.  

“I used to think that I was heating spicy food before, but after I tried these sorts of chillies I realized that I had never tasted true hotness,” he said.

With the help of his father Svetislav and a friend, Tanic is now growing about 15 varieties including the Trinidad Moruga Scorpio, which has 1.2 million heat units, the Seven Pot Habanero and the Mustard Habanero. They grind up the peppers for ultra-spicy sauces with flavours ranging from pear to chocolate.

In the small cabin where he dries peppers on a rack, the intensity of the capsicum particles in the air make it difficult to breathe. With bees and wind criss-crossing different strains to make new pepper varieties, it is difficult to measure the produce’s hotness. 

“New sorts are created and it takes time for them to be established, so we don’t know how hot they are,” he said.




 

Copyright © 1999- Shanghai Daily. All rights reserved.Preferably viewed with Internet Explorer 8 or newer browsers.

沪公网安备 31010602000204号

Email this to your friend