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Chili burn happens because your tongue sends pain signals, not just “heat.” Your brain treats it like a threat and releases endorphins—why spicy fans can feel a mini-high.
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Kısaca
Chili burn happens because your tongue sends pain signals, not just “heat.” Your brain treats it like a threat and releases endorphins—why spicy fans can feel a mini-high.
The green wasabi served in many places isn’t from real wasabi root but from a horseradish-based blend. The heat is similar, yet the subtle aroma belongs to the real thing.
3000-year-old honey found in Egyptian pyramids was still edible. Secret: low moisture and acidity.
Lemon’s sourness is your tongue sensing acidity, often as a “caution” signal. The neat part: extra saliva is an automatic defense that tries to dilute the acid.
Chili burns without heating you: capsaicin tricks heat-sensing nerves. That’s why cold water helps briefly, while fatty foods can calm it more effectively.
Chocolate was once real money. A rabbit was worth 10 cocoa beans.
Vanilla smells like sweetness, yet it comes from the pod fruit of an orchid. Fermenting and curing the pod slowly develops the familiar aroma.
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