jbrahy Posted August 15, 2012 Posted August 15, 2012 Hi Everyone, I'm obviously not a chemistry or science major but I don't know where else to turn for an informed answer. I'm working on a new recipe and I need to predict the scoville rating. I'm using several different types of peppers to get the best flavor but some of them are just extremely hot and need to be diluted. Here's my data. How do I calculate it? Thanks, JB
Greg H. Posted August 15, 2012 Posted August 15, 2012 (edited) How is the Scoville rating calculated in the first place? Edit, after a bit of googling, you could convert your scolville values to ASTA pungency units (see Scolville Scale on Wiki), which are given in parts per million. This would let you calculate a weighted average based on the % of the final mixture and the original parts per million, and you could use that average to determine the final Scolville value. Edited August 15, 2012 by Greg H.
Iota Posted August 15, 2012 Posted August 15, 2012 Well you'd need to measure the capsaicin content of the powder mixture. I'm sure that's done with analysis equipment of some sort. It's practically an impossible task to measure it in the way you are trying. I have some pure capsaicin extract, I suggest you buy that. You can dilute it down in proportions, from 16mil Scovilles, to the desired heat level. I don't recommend eating it roar though! 1
John Cuthber Posted August 15, 2012 Posted August 15, 2012 Pure capsaicin measures about 16,000,000 Scoville units So the hottest of your peppers contains (the equivalent of) about part in 16 of capsaicin. The red Savinia is a bit more than half that so it's about 1 in 32. So you can work through each one working out how much capsaicin is in it. Then you can multiply each of those concentration by the amount you added to the mix, so you add up 0.02 times 1/16 and 0.02 times 1/32 and so on to get the equivalent concentration of capsaicin in the mixture. From that, and the value for the pure material, you can work out the effective Scoville value for the mixture. But who cares? It's going to be pretty much inedible.
jbrahy Posted August 16, 2012 Author Posted August 16, 2012 I'm not trying to be exact but a rough estimate would work. I was hoping I could take the volume (tablespoons) and Scoville rating to generate a factor for each chile portion and then average those to determine a overall Scoville rating. something like this: Ap = chile pepper A volume As = chile pepper A rating Bp = chile pepper B volume Bs = chile pepper B rating Cp = chile pepper C volume Cs = chile pepper C rating Dp = chile pepper D volume Ds = chile pepper D rating Ep = chile pepper E volume Es = chile pepper E rating Fp = chile pepper F volume Fs = chile pepper F rating Gp = chile pepper G volume Gs = chile pepper G rating Hp = chile pepper H volume Hs = chile pepper H rating Ip = chile pepper I volume Is = chile pepper I rating Jp = chile pepper J volume Js = chile pepper J rating Kp = chile pepper K volume Ks = chile pepper K rating average Scoville rating = (Ap * As) + (Bp * Bs) + (Cp * Cs) + (Dp * Ds) + (Ep * Es) + (Fp * Fs) + (Gp * Gs) + (Hp * Hs) + (Ip * Is) + (Jp * Js) + (Kp * Ks) / (total number of chile) Is this possible? Am I on the right track? Thanks, JB
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