A Buffalo Wild Wings was just put in the food court at the Post Mall near my house. I had never had it before until just last week. My wife hadn't been to one since she moved from Indiana so we had to try it out. It was pretty good, but it wasn't anything to rave about. I'd go back, but I can make better wings at home.
At 6/30/09 08:33 PM, letiger wrote:
i just had like 12 blazin sauce wings and THEY ARE FUCKING HOT
Spiciness in most foods is caused by capsaicin, as well as other chemical compounds such as isothiocyanates and alkyl-amides, but capsaisin is usually the culprit when it comes to foods and spices containing chilies and pepper oils. Capsaisin is not water soluble, so drinking water will not help. In fact, water will only serve to spread the oils containing capsaisin. Capsaisin is fat and alcohol soluble though, so drink milk or beer instead.
At 6/30/09 08:38 PM, Jercurpac wrote:
When you're eating something spicy you're eating something acidic. So it goes to reason that you need to get a base in your mouth to cancel out the heat. Chew on a bar of hand soap for a few minutes and you should be fine.
The chemicals in spicy foods are actually alkaline, not acidic. Foods high in acidity, such as tomato juice or lemon juice, will actually relieve the burning very well.