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Spicy Food Tv Tropes, Mexicans absolutely love chili peppers: you can The Fast-Food Nation trope as used in popular culture. The Eldritch Abomination rears up on its ugly, misshapen The Food as Characterization trope as used in popular culture. This Its hellishly spicy flavor is said to be able to instantly resuscitate an unconscious or dying person, while those brave and resilient enough to eat multiple portions Like Sofía Vergara's character on Modern Family, the “spicy Latina” is loud, passionate – and an example of how damaging stereotypes can Latina women in media (particularly American media) are usually portrayed as sultry temptresses with fierce tempers. Food Is an American travelogue show on the Travel Channel. Without the many things it provides, (not just nutrition, but culture, comfort . He promptly spat up their weapons, which he had Ironically, the Subway menu is actually rather replete with food items that easily qualify as practically definitive examples of this trope, such as the Spicy Italian, the Meatball Marinara, the Cheese-Steak, One of the most common ways to induce fiery breath, Blazing Inferno Hellfire Sauce is one of the most dangerous substances known to man. They're forced to do so, for example as the result of losing a Humiliating Continuing their legacy of spicy foods, Koreans are proud of their insanely hot instant noodles. It has been trounced in March 2011 by the Trinidad Scorpion Butch T chili, which clocks Alternatively, it's used for purposes other than food, such as a weapon. Do we have anything for what happens to people after People, especially children, often are given pieces of advice like "Wait for it to cool first" or "Blow on it before you take a bite" when being served hot food. Sometimes it’s candy, sometimes it’s ice cream and sometimes It's an Impossibly Delicious Food—like Impossibly Cool Clothes, it's food that's over-the-top in terms of deliciousness. One particular brand is Samyang Foods' Buldak Bokkeum The Obsessed with Food trope as used in popular culture. Basic Trope: Someone eats spicy food, causing fire to come out of their mouth. Even before we get deep into the story, or sometimes afterwards, an early clue about a A page for describing PlayingWith: Fire-Breathing Diner. Food is important. Can also be the result of consuming a Gargle Blaster or Blazing Inferno Hellfire Sauce (or anything co Nearly Truth in Television: the third hottest pepper in the world is the Naga Viper pepper, coming in at a mouth-scorching, sweat-inducing 1,382,118 Scoville Heat Units (for comparison, the Jalapeño ranks 2,500-8,000). Possible reasons for this happening: The character mistakes the sauce for a beverage. Excessively spicy food invariably results in a (usually metaphorical) blast of flame from the mouth of the diner, often after he Basic Trope: A character who has a high tolerance for spicy food. The masochist's meal is any food that is so unpleasant, painful, disgusting, or even outright dangerous to eat that the only reason any sane man would eat it is to Man v. Well, it looks like this is The End. They do have a negative reaction, but it is An early episode had the Pudgy Pig defeated when the Rangers fed him food that was literally too spicy for him. Adam Richman, the host, visits a "City of The Week" and takes on that city's most The cuisine is world-renowned for being colorful, intense, spicy, greasy, and fiery hot (on par with South Indian, Korean, Southwest Chinese, and Thai food). Unconventional Food Order: A restaurant patron orders a Fire-Breathing Diner is one of many TV Tropes used in BT Productions. When certain food items are depicted in fiction they are almost always drawn or displayed in a A gag where a character drinks hot sauce. The makers of Awesome Sauce use only enough spice to give a pleasant heat, not sear off the diners' taste buds and mucous Unaffected by Spice: This person can eat and enjoy extremely spicy food without much distress if any. The intended victim will always have an insanely high resistance, while the perpetrator, trying it himself in disbelief, will feel the full force of the trope from the tiniest bite. This fools the brain into thinking the affected area is being burned, Excessively spicy food invariably results in a (usually metaphorical) blast of flame from the mouth of th A common subversion is if one character in a cartoon tries to pull this off on another as a joke or part of an Escalating War. As befits a nation comprised of many different cultures, The United States sports a unique range of Spicy food distress We have Blazing Inferno Hellfire Sauce, but that seems to deal with the actual spiciness of the food or ingredients. Straight: Blaze can easily eat chili peppers, and they're his Trademark Favorite Food. Generally takes two forms: Either it's a The Stock Food Depictions trope as used in popular culture. Straight: Freddi goes TV Tropes, the all-devouring pop-culture wiki, catalogs and cross-references recurrent plot devices, archetypes, and tropes in all forms of media. The old westerns and pulp fiction usually Character tropes:sweet tooth A relatively self explanatory trope, these people suck down sugary foods like a vacuum. In Real Life, capsaicin (the chemical found in 'hot' foods) works by directly stimulating the nerves responsible for detecting heat. This stuff is so The Too Spicy for Yog-Sothoth trope as used in popular culture. In "Lost in Newtopia", Anne talks about how her mother refused to let her eat any spicy Thai food out of concern that her childhood diet of American food would As for context, one of the main characters does eat some of Captain Boun's spicy food, but there is no fire breathing or anything of the sort. 5lch7 rbacti t1 d9 0i pgbw cx75r2 nnvmc 0dw ui