Most people can't touch habaneros, and even have trouble with Thai chillis, but I grew up eating hot food.
I regularly cook with habaneros and scotch bonnets (probably why I am normally not allowed in the kitchen) - and I essentially got a taste for very hot food. So hot that even my Indian friends would break a sweat eating my food. Then at the grocery store they had these somewhat larger slightly shriveled looking habaneros on for $3.99 a pound. So naturally, I bought a lot of them. Upon getting home and excitedly putting them into a dish, I noticed that they weren't shriveled, but actually blistered.
To make a long story short: if you see habaneros with actual blisters on it, it means it is gut wrenchingly hot. But... it was awesome....
Sorry for the anecdote, this forum looked lonely.
I regularly cook with habaneros and scotch bonnets (probably why I am normally not allowed in the kitchen) - and I essentially got a taste for very hot food. So hot that even my Indian friends would break a sweat eating my food. Then at the grocery store they had these somewhat larger slightly shriveled looking habaneros on for $3.99 a pound. So naturally, I bought a lot of them. Upon getting home and excitedly putting them into a dish, I noticed that they weren't shriveled, but actually blistered.
To make a long story short: if you see habaneros with actual blisters on it, it means it is gut wrenchingly hot. But... it was awesome....
Sorry for the anecdote, this forum looked lonely.