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People have been gaga for hot sauces for centuries (or at least decades), enjoying seeing how much torturing their mouths can handle with fiery, burning pepper sauces. But why is there no sauce that celebrates the opposite sensation, the highly cooling quality of mint? The sauce would be all natural,
with various mints and vinegars and mint extracts combined to blow your head off with incredible coolness! It could be produced using current knowhow.
[link]
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The sauce is supposed to be all-natural. |
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Menthol is (or at least tends to be) all-natural, too.
(But admittedly it doesn't contain vinegar.)
And please do not drink, or try to drink, pure menthol oil. |
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Or, if you must, at least be sure to have a friend nearby who isn't drinking it. |
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Damn, now I'm kind of curious as to what would really happen. |
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Menthol is an alcohol, so you would be become roaring drunk;--then you would die. |
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Since I asked, here's the list of symptoms
from the National Toxological Program's searchable database of What Happens When You Do Stupid Things: |
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SYMPTOMS:
Symptoms of exposure to this compound may include irritation of the skin,
eyes, mucous membranes and upper respiratory tract. Exposure may also
cause hypersensitivity reactions including contact dermatitis, spasms of the
glottis and collapse in young children, urticaria, flushing, headache,
insomnia, unsteady gait, thick speech, tremor of the hands, mental confusion,
depression, vomiting, cramp in the legs and bradycardia. Exposure to
compounds of this class may cause painless blanching or erythema, possible corrosion, profuse sweating, intense thirst, nausea, diarrhea, cyanosis from
methemoglobinemia, hyperactivity, stupor, blood pressure fall, hyperpnea,
abdominal pain, hemolysis, convulsions, coma and pulmonary edema followed by
pneumonia. If death from respiratory failure is not immediate, jaundice and
oliguria or anuria may occur. These compounds occasionally cause skin
sensitization.— | jutta,
Feb 02 2001, last modified Feb 03 2001 |
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And what about unbelievable sourness? Why not try one molar hydrochloric acid and get back to us about it? |
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Hey Guys, mint sauce has been a traditional favorite for
hundreds of years in England, eaten with roast lamb or
lamb chops. Yummy! |
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Yes, the sauce would be extremely refreshing. |
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"unsteady gait, thick speech, tremor of the hands, mental confusion" --hey I am like
this at 3 AM when I wake up needing to go to the bathroom. |
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Bobzaguy, maybe have your pillow checked for mint sauce or menthol contamination.
How fortunate we are this idea is NOT about how to make a "Southern" US recipe - HOT mint sauce made specialy for those maniacs who can't get enough pain to drown out the taste of food.
"Joe's Supercool Mintsauce - one teaspoon gives your whole meal an Artic touch..." |
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1. Menthol is not methanol.
2. I have drunk menthol. I think they key is not to drink too much. The folks at Schlitz apparently theorized that since black folks smoke mentholated cigarettes, and drink malt liquor, mentholated malt liquor would be a big seller in black neighborhoods. The test product was Schlitz Malt Liquor Bull Menthol. I wish I had kept the cans. It was very weird and not very good. One plus is that after drinking one (and they only came in 16 oz cans) you positively reeked of menthol. It never made it past the test phase.
3. Perhaps Altoids could make the Mega Mint sauce? |
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I'm sorry, but this idea appears to be describing
mouthwash. |
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