This particular pepper is a 7 Pot Barrackpore. The 7-pots-family earned its name due to its ability to heat 7 pots of stew. The Barrackpore is excellent for hot sauces and powders owing to its fantastic flavour, and unrelenting heat. 2/15
The 7 Pot Barrackpore starts at the same Scoville Heat Unit (SHU) as the regular ones, but its highest level has frequently approached 1.3M SHU, which can easily set your face on fire. How the name Barrackpore came about, though, is quite intriguing. 3/15
What does that have to do with the island in the Caribbean, though? We travel back to May 1845, when βFatel Razackβ became the first ship to transport indentured labourers from India to Trinidad. 8/15
The practice continued to bring thousands of Indians to the Caribbean up until 1917. 9/15
The vast majority of these Indian immigrants came from North India via the port of Calcutta, where they were known as Kalkatiyas; those who left from South India via the port of Madras were referred to as Madrasis in Trinidad. 11/15
Intriguingly, they gave familiar place names to the areas where they settled in Trinidad, mainly after the places the migrants came from. There were settlements named after Calcutta, Fyzabad, Coromandel, Malabar, Madras, and Patna, to name a few. 12/15
However, it was not just the landless Indian peasants who came to Trinidad. Several academics assert that many Indian Sepoys who participated in the great 1857 uprising and fought against the British also fled to Trinidad to avoid execution. 13/15
The idea that their ancestors participated in the Great Sepoy Mutiny was one that many people in this Trinidadian community deeply embraced. A true tale has been kept hidden by the working-class community in the southern Trinidadian sugarcane fields. 15/15
Source: INDIAN HERITAGE IN TRINIDAD, WEST INDIES / J. C. JHA / Caribbean Quarterly,
Diaspora and Nation-Building / Ruchi Verma,
Indian Diaspora in the Caribbean, History, Culture and Identity/Brinsley Samaroo / Rattan Lal Hangloo, pepperhead.com. @WikiCommons
Diaspora and Nation-Building / Ruchi Verma,
Indian Diaspora in the Caribbean, History, Culture and Identity/Brinsley Samaroo / Rattan Lal Hangloo, pepperhead.com. @WikiCommons
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