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THE DAY MY ARSE DIED
Yesterday I decided to make the world's
hottest curry using a spice mix with the
endearingly juvenile name Satan's Ashes.
Satan's Ashes are comprised of the usual
things you might expect in a quality curry
powder: Garam Masala, Cumin and so on but
also the Dorset Naga chilli (880,000 on the
Scoville scale), the Naga Morich (953,721 on
the Scoville scale) and the infamous Bhut
Jolokia which - at 1,001,304 Scoville units
is the world's hottest chilli pepper. To put
that into some kind of context, that makes
the Bhut Jolokia over 100 times hotter than
a Jalapeno, 20 times hotter than a Tobasco
pepper and 3 times hotter than a Scotch
Bonnet.
In India, Bhut Jolokia is smeared on fences
to repel elephants. This noxious, possibly
poisonous substance which even elephants
have no truck with, was precisely what I
intended to put in my mouth and eventually
pass out of my arse.
Now before I proceed with a full pictorial
account of the entire sorry affair I would
like to establish my Scoville-endurance
credentials somewhat. I'm no stranger to
spicy foods, particularly curry. I don't
find a Madras to be particularly spicy, I
can handle a Vindaloo without too much
difficulty and on one memorable occasion I
ate a Chicken Phaal without having to go to
the hospital afterwards.
Satan's Ashes are however a different
matter...

Here we have the prime ingredient along with
some garlic, tomato puree, an onion, some
cider vinegar and tomatoes. Also needed are
some chicken breasts (not pictured) and an
unsuspecting masochist friend (also not
pictured). Now let's take a look inside the
ashes of Satan himself.

Handle with extreme bloody care. Apparently
if you get this stuff in your eyes it melts
through to your brain or something. What
other prime ingredients are needed though?

Lovely booze. Mmm.
We'll also need:

A masochist friend who will be henceforth
known as Stewart (for that is his name).
Don't be confused by the wire dangling from
his jugular, Stewart is a real person and
not some kind of chilli-consuming cyborg
from the future. It'd be really cool if he
was though.
Now, back in the kitchen I encountered a
slight problem as the curry recipe says to
add a teaspoon from the small sachet of
'ashes'...

Can you work out which is the 'small' sachet
readers? No, neither can I so after a
careful process of "eenie, meenie, minie,
mo..." I added a teaspoon of the crap in the
left-hand bag to some chicken and other
stuff.

Mmm...raw. By the way, do you like my fine
selection of measuring spoons?

Now fry the onions until golden brown before
adding the chicken to sautee for five
minutes. Finally, add the tomatoes and cook
for a further two minutes. At some point you
also bung in the rest of the stuff from the
apparently small sachet.

Add water, bring to the boil and chuck in
the contents of the large sachet. Now wait
around for about 30 minutes while everything
simmers.

Now is a good time to have your first beer.
If I was in Fable II I might say "A
delicious looking pint." Then I'd proceed to
say exactly the same thing again about
thirty times until I lost the will to live.

Here's the finished product served with a
garlic and coriander naan and basmati rice.
Note the tray which I nicked from McDonalds.
You may at this point wish to assemble your
taste-testers and hope that they're a little
less disappointing than mine. My girlfriend
(not pictured) tried two grains of rice with
a little sauce and squealed in pain. My Dad
managed one grain of rice with the
lightest smear of sauce on it and
immediately had to retire for an infusion of
milk.

There he is imbibing good old British milk.
None of that fancy French milk for him, no
siree.
Now it's time to tuck in.

Stewart makes a start, albeit with
considerable trepidation...

...and immediately reaches for some liquid
refreshment. Make no mistake, this is a
killer from the very first bite. Although
initially it's possible to taste the sauce
which is sweet and a little fruity, this
mostly tastes (in Stewart's words) "of
pain."
I can't really put it any better than that.
Not hot, just bloody painful. The real trick
is to get it into your mouth without it
touching your lips and to absorb as much of
the spice on your tongue before swallowing
it. Also: try not to die.

Stewart vanished for his first ice-cube
break. He's definitely suffering and I am
too, particularly as the beer isn't doing
anything to dull the agony. This isn't a
dish that builds and builds, it's almost
intolerably painful from the get-go and
there's no let up no matter how much rice
you mix with it, or how much naan you eat
between mouthfuls. It's difficult really to
relate in pictures what something feels like
but maybe this close study of Stewart's face
might help:

Doesn't look happy does he?

Neither do I.

Stewart takes his second ice-cube break and
as you can see I'm now alternating between
milk and beer. Milk works a bit better but
when the pain returns it seems twice as bad.
Too late I've realised that trying to douse
the pain is actually counter-productive.

Dear God, make it stop!

And that's me done. I've eaten the meat and
the sauce but I just feel too sick and
genuinely frightened to eat the last of the
rice. At this point my eyes and nose are
streaming and my hearing has partially gone.
When something is so spicy that it deafens
you, it's time to quit. But wait...

Stewart not only finishes but scrapes the
plate too! The entire thing took him twenty
minutes to get through and it takes him a
further thirty minutes to recover.

Unfortunately it took me a bit longer.
Frankly I was a fool to myself. The way to
tackle this curry is head-on. Limit any
drinks to a minimum and proceed with
cautious speed for that was Stewart's tactic
which proved to be more successful than
mine.
I won't actually be attempting to repeat the
feat due to the savage harm which was
inflicted upon my person when the curry made
it's way (explosively) out of my ringpiece
about six hours later. "As above, so below"
and if I thought the pain in my mouth was
bad, it was nought but a tickle compared to
the shitting broken glass sensation
of my burning arse (fortunately not
pictured).
I woke up in the wee hours for round 2 of
shitpocalypse and almost passed out from the
pain in my guts. As yet I haven't heard
anything from Stewart although when he left
he was complaining about a "Burning
bell-end."
The moments leading up to my surrender:


