This is a powerful white chocolate bar containing
Naga chilli from the Dartmoor Chilli Farm.
Not exact matches
Of course, there is no citation for this statistic and no quoted source other than
chilli farmer Salvatore Genovese who claims he ships out half a million pods a week of «Dorset
Naga», a superhot variety very similar to «
Naga Jolokia».
«We fully agree that these are of the same species and type which might have migrated to other nearby states and countries including Bangladesh and Srilanka where this
chilli continued to be known as
Naga Mircha («
Naga Moresh»).
One of those clients recently asked us to test a
Chilli they described as a «
Naga Viper».
In fact,
Naga jolokia, Nagahari, Bhut jolokia, Bih jolokia or Borbih jolokia are the same
chilli but named differently at different places.
My guess is that it's another hoax, like the Purple
Naga or the guy from Taiwan with the
Chilli Museum.
Other names for this chile include Nagahari, Bhut Jolokia, Bih Jolokia, Borbih, Raja Mircha, Raja
Chilli, Mirch, Mircha,
Naga Moresh,
Naga Morich, Tezpur, and quite recently Dorset
Naga.
The
Naga Morich «snake or serpent
chilli» is one of the world's most sought after and fearsome
chilli peppers.
The Original Recipe was soon followed by a version called Private Reserve which had even more
naga morich pepper than the original, but the hard core
chilli heads among you said the sauce was very hot, but not hot enough.