Grow up in Socal eating spicy Mexican food

>Grow up in Socal eating spicy Mexican food
>Live in SF
>Buy Serrano peppers from a few local markets
>Not spicy at all

I thought my tolerance to spicy food was increasing or something. But I visited home recently, and realized the peppers in SF are bland as fuck.

How am I supposed to cook with this shit?
How is this possible?
Why?

I feel like I'm being ripped off. Why bother selling a hot variety of chili, if you're going to make it bland as fuck. I swear the Habaneros here are on par with normal Serranos.

Is this some stupid ploy to make white people feel like they're "cultured" and "diverse" and can stomach ethnic food? I swear, it's probably the same group of fucks that order the "spicy" option at restaurants, then bitch that it's too spicy. Seriously fuck those people, they're the reason restaurant food is bland.

Not enough lead in the soil.

serranos are literally the first step over bell peppers in terms of spicy, retard. poblanos are right in that same ballpark.

Yeah I am from socal living in norcal now and Mexican food and ingredients are not as good as they are in socal.
Also fuck hella.

Serranos don't have much more heat than a good jalapeno.

Just stick with the habanero's, user.

It may have been the store.
In Utah we have a store called Maceys that carries what appears to be a great selection of peppers, but for whatever reason there is zero spice.
I mean, I could eat a handful of habenaros no problem.
If I go to another store and get their habenaros I would fucking die if I tried to eat one.
Shop around if you haven't already, mexibro.
And thank you and your wonderful people for bringing pic related over to the US.

And fuck anybody that puts hominy in their menudo. They shot be shot in the street like the wild dogs they are

>Also fuck hella
Yes, pls.

inb4 that one retard that claims that spicy food can't have flavor

>living in norcal now

Just find some weed growers that grow peppers too and you'll probably be getting the best peppers you'd ever get.

>>Buy Serrano peppers
>>Not spicy at all
You don't say...

Literally no spice, like a bell pepper. They're way less spicy than normal Serranos.

The only peppers I can seem to find here that even register as spicy with my palette are the Habeneros, but they're small and expensive. Even then, they're not spicy. Like I can straight up eat one raw (which I can't normally tolerate).

Insert hackey joke here about the San Francisco natives caring greatly about the sensation of things both entering AND exiting their buttholes and that's why they like their peppers bland

I'll look into that thanks.

Go look a a different store for peppers. The heat level of chilies is largely determined by their growing conditions- the hotter the weather is, the hotter the chilies are. If the peppers you're getting are greenhouse grown or grown somewhere (comparatively) temperate, they'll be less hot. A different store in the area might source their peppers from somewhere else, so they could be hotter. Shop around.

Texan pepper farmer here. You are WAY off. Serrano is the step between Jalapeno and Habanero.

So is it true if you grow hot peppers and sweet in the same area, they cross pollinate and the hot turn out mild?

Just buy dried chilies online. Problem solved

I used to think that, but I did some research and apparently it's the next generation that will be affected if you save the seeds.

fuck off with your liberal facts, this is an opinion thread

Peppers get hotter when conditions are shittier. USA peppers get watered so they are less hot. I find this is particularly the case with stuff from Whole Foods

It's San Francisco. Your chillies have turned gay.

>How is this possible?
Growing conditions can drastically change the result of the fruit. Wine people might sound pretentious when talking about terroir and various vintages, but they're on to something. You can grow the same kind of grape in different places and get different results. But wine is the product of thousands (often millions) of individual fruits. A hot pepper is an individual, so it has much greater variability.

I live on the East Coast. The peppers I get come from a variety of sources: local, West Coast, Mexico... There's no uniformity. I've had serranos as mild as bell peppers and poblanos that were hotter than your average serrano. Jalapenos vary from mildly spicy to powerhouse depending on the individual pepper.

To deal with this lack of standardization I judge each pepper on an individual basis. If you have a good nose you can usually tell how hot a pepper is as soon as you cut it. Failing that let taste be your guide.

what varieties do you grow. im staring with a bunch of pepper seeds I brought from my grandparents ranch in Mexico.