[This article originally appeared on Boston24.com, a local news site  which no longer exists.]
At 9pm, I downed a preemptive shot  of Pepto-Bismol.  At 9:30pm, I arrived at East Coast Grill in Inman  Square with five adventurous friends.  We were there for Hell Night, a  celebration of spiciness that occurs a few times a year.  Reservations  fill up nearly two months in advance; Massachusetts is apparently full  of masochists. 
It was the first Hell Night experience for  everyone in my group, and we entered the restaurant with a mix of sheer  excitement and a bit of trepidation.  Decked out in caution tape, skulls  and crossbones, and other threatening decorations, East Coast Grill was  full of adrenaline, sweat, and the near-toxic smoke of chili peppers  sizzling in the open kitchen.  As we waited for our table, a siren went  off: one diner couldn't handle the heat and ordered "the antidote" - a  glass of milk and a creamsicle.  The sound of the siren triggered the  kitchen staff to gleefully chant "Wimp! Wimp! Wimp!" as the diner  swallowed his pride in an attempt to salvage his digestive system.
Hell Night is not for the faint of heart (or stomach).  Sure, you can  order from the aptly named Wimp Menu, but if that's your plan, there's  really no reason to take up a table when so many chili addicts are dying  to attend.  The Hell Night menu does feature some relatively mild (and  delicious) entrees - look for the choices rated at two or three bombs.   But the star of the menu, the challenge that we just couldn't resist, is  the Pasta from Hell, rated at nine bombs, made with the infamous Bhut  Naga Jolokia, the "ghost chili."  It's the hottest pepper in the world.   The menu advises you not to order this nightmare-on-a-plate.  The host  of the evening, Dr. Pepper, advises you not to order it, and then gives  you a frightening consent form to sign.  He also waves a wand with  flashing neon lights over your head.  We weren't sure why.
The  task of signing the consent form regrettably fell to me, even though 5/6  of our table planned on trying the pasta.  I almost lost my nerve when I  reached the last paragraph:
"...Imagine an angry Goliath  Birdeater crawling down your throat, the irritating sting of its barbed  urticating hairs penetrating the membranes of your tongue and  esophagus.  The large hairy spider reaches your stomach and sinks its  fangs into your intestines...Hours later it tears out the other end,  alive."
Stupidity prevailed and we ordered the pasta.  Five  of us vowed to try at least five bites.  Roxanne, the wise one, opted  out with the excuse that she would like her colon to remain intact.   Fair enough.
Some other dishes arrived first, like the Russian  Roulette Deviled Eggs, each one flavored differently - anywhere from two  to eight bombs.  Roxanne ended up with a seven- or eight-bomber, spicy  karmic revenge for not trying the Pasta from Hell.  The five-bomb peel  'n' eat New Orleans-style BBQ shrimp was delicious, although one must be  careful to remember to wash hands thoroughly before using the  bathroom if one has been handling spicy foods.
The pasta arrived  completely saturated in orange and yellow sauces, topped with a huge  pile of what appeared to be finely chopped ghost chili.  It sat on the  table mocking us as we tentatively smelled it and decided to wait for  our cornbread to arrive.  A scowling busboy came to our table several  times while the pasta was untouched, and he glared in disapproval,  thinking that we were too wimpy to even try a bite.  Finally, Joel  decided he couldn't wait anymore, and Chaz and I followed suit.  "Please  don't die," begged Roxanne.  Geoff and Michael wisely decided to enjoy  some more food before destroying their taste buds.
Imagine being  pepper-sprayed in the mouth for about ten minutes straight.  Everything  that touches your lips tastes spicy; you can't find relief in bread,  and don't even think about trying water - it'll just make it worse.   Finally, the pain dies down...until you realize that it is traveling  through your digestive system, and you can still feel it every step of  the way.  It comes in waves: a few minutes of near-comfort followed by  torture.  Sweat dripping, tears pouring.  And even when you feel halfway  decent, you realize that tonight or tomorrow, there will be hell to  pay.
Joel, who used to work at a Thai restaurant, somehow downed  eight bites and even dipped the bread in the sauce a couple times.  (He  paid for it later.)  Chaz and I stopped at five.  "You keep not eating  it, and it gets hotter!" exclaimed Chaz, several minutes after his last  bite.  Michael and Geoff were done after one.  After Geoff's first - and  last - bite, all he could utter was a pitiful "no."  A biology teacher,  he had been informing us of some interesting capsaicin facts before our  food arrived.  For example, if ghost chili were in liquid form, it'd  have a pH level of one.  Other acids with a pH of one include  hydrochloric acid and sulfuric acid.  In a more dilute form, sulfuric  acid is found in batteries.
Cornbread was a welcome relief,  especially once we realized that just eating the accompanying butter  helped a lot, and we didn't have to order milk and get berated by the  waitstaff.  With the few taste buds we had left, we enjoyed the rest of  the food, such as the seven-bomb harissa-smoked lamb shoulder with merguez sausage, which tasted  very mild after the pasta.  We also tried the Wings of Ass  Destruction.  I will leave it to you, adventurous readers, to try these  next time and see if they live up to their name.
As the night drew to a close, we headed home in a sort of capsaicin high. I felt great; pepto-bismol before and after the meal was probably what saved me. At least one member of my group, though, suffered some devastating gastrointestinal aftermath that night and the following day. So, a few pieces of advice for you daredevils that would like to attend a future Hell Night and eat the Pasta from Hell:
1) Coat your digestive tract before and after. Pepto-bismol, ice cream, milk, Rollaids.
2) Don't overeat. Take it slow.
3) If there's a chance you touched the pasta sauce, wash your hands many times - and with dish detergent, not just soap - before taking out contact lenses or handling any sensitive body parts that you value.
4) Don't make any important plans for the following day.
5) Hell Night is probably not a good idea for a first date.
6)  Eat more ghost chili!  In some parts  of the world, it is used as a cure for stomach troubles.
See also: Cinco de Mayo Dinner at East Coast Grill
 

 
 
