34

It's well-known that if you eat spicy food, you can neutralize the flavor (and thus stop your mouth from burning like a forest fire) by drinking milk. This is due to casein. Simply drinking water or something cold does not achieve the same effect.

But I'm vegan, so I don't drink milk. So what else can I consume (that's vegan) to quickly neutralize spicy flavors?

This is not a duplicate of How can I wash down spicy food?, as the advice there concentrates on dairy products.

JesseTG
  • 1,510
  • 4
  • 15
  • 18
  • 11
    Hi JesseTG, I know why you thought this might run afoul of the "what to put in my dish" rule. In general, we don't take "what to put in my mouth" questions either, because they are based on taste. But I think this one makes a good exception. Cleaned up the wording; the question is not in danger of being closed. – rumtscho Jan 14 '16 at 13:06
  • capsein is fat soluble which is the 'real' trick here. Water makes it worse since it dosen't actually bind with the chemicals – Journeyman Geek Jan 16 '16 at 05:25
  • Why do you feel you need to do anything? Just enjoy the wonderful taste of the spice. – Neil Meyer Nov 23 '16 at 16:22
  • 1
    In asian countries (Thai) they use coconut flakes or salty peanuts to avoid the hot spicy flavour. – roetnig Sep 06 '17 at 07:56

14 Answers14

27

I have done no testing of this at all but I was surprised to find on this site that they recommend trying a spoon full (or cube of) sugar.

Perhaps the easiest way of calming down a flaming mouth is by sucking on a sugar cube or holding a teaspoon of sugar in your mouth. This helps by absorbing the spicy oil that is coating your mouth, as well as giving you a different, strong taste to concentrate on. A bit of mind-trickery and science combined!

Other things I've eaten in the past include starches, like bread or rice.

Here's a fun infographic and most of the items on it are vegan:

Infographic of foods you can eat to kill spicy flavor from here

Catija
  • 16,468
  • 9
  • 55
  • 88
  • 11
    Coconut milk works brilliantly IN food to balance spicyness, and does not have casein (apart from a few brands that add some!), so dairy products aren't just about the casein when it comes to that ability. – rackandboneman Jan 14 '16 at 07:56
  • 2
    Peanut butter is certainly very effective. – PLL Jan 14 '16 at 11:49
  • 11
    Peanut (butter) is another example of something that often goes into food to balance spice (Panang Curry, Anything Ka Salan) ... and there is a common theme with the coconut milk: Easily emulsified, good tasting FAT. – rackandboneman Jan 14 '16 at 13:40
  • Beer works great but I would avoid a really hoppy one like a IPA because that can add to the discomfort. A good tripel or something sweet works great. Of course you probably want to do some research on whether a given beer is vegan. It's really the sugar in milk that counteracts the hotness. The commonly used Scoville scale tells you how much spice is needed to overcome a standard concentration of sugar water. – JimmyJames Jan 14 '16 at 16:30
  • 1
    FWIW, in my country is is not at all well known that drinking milk reduces heat from spicy foods. But it is well known, and perhaps has always been well known, that eating sugar helps a lot. Unlike milk, there is no scientific explanation for sugar. Just hundreds of years of experience passed down from grandmothers to their grandchildren. This is why a lot of south-east-asian savoury food contain sugar. Take for example the peanut sauce. Nobody here thinks that the peanut reduces the heat, instead everyone believes it's the sugar added to the sauce. – slebetman Jan 16 '16 at 10:14
  • 1
    @Darkhogg this is localized by the way... in some countries sugar is considered vegan by most by default unless there is reason to assume it is imported, in some it isn't ... has to do with what processes the local sugar industry is known to use. – rackandboneman Jan 16 '16 at 22:03
  • Sugar is the best counteraction to spice in recipes, both because sugar generates a pleasure response in the brain that overrides the sensation of discomfort from spicy foods and because it produces a mild cooling sensation as it dissolves on the tongue. – HandsomeGorilla Mar 13 '16 at 23:50
  • 1
    What I doubt is that acidic foods help - from experience, vinegar or lemon can make too-spicy food even more unpleasant.... – rackandboneman Nov 23 '16 at 10:28
15

Avocado would be the classic answer IME (often in the form of guacamole, but not required to be in that form.) AFAIK it's the fat effectively diluting the hot pepper oil in either case, (where it's unaffected by water since it won't mix) rather than any enzyme.

...and then there's not making the food so spicy it's uncomfortable (horribly unfashionable, I know, but I care less and less about fashionable as time passes.)

Ecnerwal
  • 17,550
  • 27
  • 65
  • 3
    Let's not have a discussion about whether spicy food is good here. The question is how to cool down if you overdo it, not why you eat spicy food. – Cascabel Jan 14 '16 at 20:51
  • 3
  • You might not be the one making the food, thus you are not in control of the exact level of spicyness. 2. Making food slightly uncomfortably spicy is how you get used to spicy food, and as someone who went from completely unable to eat spicy food to loving spicy food, let me tell you, it's definitely worth a few uncomfortably spicy meals to get to that point.
  • – Tobberoth Jan 15 '16 at 12:02
  • You might be making the food, but the recipe or method calls for adding the chili very early in the process (applies to a lot of south-east asian cooking). The chili you use is either fresh produce subject to variation, or you might be using an unfamiliar brand of dried chili, or use it in a matter you are inexperienced with. There are reasons not to taste them straight. And interestingly, it seems the hotter you can eat, the less margin you have for error - 10 of given brand of chili in given dish, its almost on the mild side, 20 of them ... holy hashtag raincloud skull and crossbones!
  • – rackandboneman Jan 16 '16 at 22:10
  • 3
    "Avocado would be the classic answer" Well, it's certainly a classic answer; suggesting that it's the classic answer seems rather Mexican-centric. – David Richerby Jan 16 '16 at 22:53