This website uses cookies. Some are necessary to help our website work properly and can't be switched off, and some are optional but can optimise your browsing experience. To manage your cookie choices, click on Open settings.
Turn up the heat! Fire-eating competitors push taste buds to limit at Easton's '10 Deadly Peppers' showdown03:00
Top downloads in last 24 hours
Show more
Description

Dozens of competitors pushed their taste buds to the limit in Pennsylvania on Saturday as the infamous '10 Deadly Peppers' hot chilli eating competition returned to the Easton Farmers' Market for the 15th year.

Footage shows participants chowing down on the world's hottest chillis, including Ghost Peppers and Carolina Reapers, in a fiery battle of endurance.

Of the 20 fire-eating competitors, home town hero and runner-up of last year's event, Raj Muddu was the last man standing, taking victory and winning the coveted champion's belt.

"The peppers were hotter than last year, but after seven rounds, at least for me, they all taste the same," Muddu said. "I was all in for this, so you know I could eat another 50 peppers, no problem."

The competition takes place over ten rounds, with the intensity of the peppers increasing based on the 'Scoville Scale' (SU). The hottest chilli, the 'Trinidad Moruga Scorpion', is served up in the final round and is rated with a scorching 2,009,231 SU.

Turn up the heat! Fire-eating competitors push taste buds to limit at Easton's '10 Deadly Peppers' showdown

United States, Easton
September 30, 2024 at 13:08 GMT +00:00 · Published

Dozens of competitors pushed their taste buds to the limit in Pennsylvania on Saturday as the infamous '10 Deadly Peppers' hot chilli eating competition returned to the Easton Farmers' Market for the 15th year.

Footage shows participants chowing down on the world's hottest chillis, including Ghost Peppers and Carolina Reapers, in a fiery battle of endurance.

Of the 20 fire-eating competitors, home town hero and runner-up of last year's event, Raj Muddu was the last man standing, taking victory and winning the coveted champion's belt.

"The peppers were hotter than last year, but after seven rounds, at least for me, they all taste the same," Muddu said. "I was all in for this, so you know I could eat another 50 peppers, no problem."

The competition takes place over ten rounds, with the intensity of the peppers increasing based on the 'Scoville Scale' (SU). The hottest chilli, the 'Trinidad Moruga Scorpion', is served up in the final round and is rated with a scorching 2,009,231 SU.

Description

Dozens of competitors pushed their taste buds to the limit in Pennsylvania on Saturday as the infamous '10 Deadly Peppers' hot chilli eating competition returned to the Easton Farmers' Market for the 15th year.

Footage shows participants chowing down on the world's hottest chillis, including Ghost Peppers and Carolina Reapers, in a fiery battle of endurance.

Of the 20 fire-eating competitors, home town hero and runner-up of last year's event, Raj Muddu was the last man standing, taking victory and winning the coveted champion's belt.

"The peppers were hotter than last year, but after seven rounds, at least for me, they all taste the same," Muddu said. "I was all in for this, so you know I could eat another 50 peppers, no problem."

The competition takes place over ten rounds, with the intensity of the peppers increasing based on the 'Scoville Scale' (SU). The hottest chilli, the 'Trinidad Moruga Scorpion', is served up in the final round and is rated with a scorching 2,009,231 SU.

Top downloads in last 24 hours
Show more