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Employee Warns Woman About 7M Scoville Sauce, She Laughs, Then Vomits

by Annie Nguyen
October 21, 2025
in Social Issues

A Redditor shared a workday story hotter than the sauces he sells. In a small local hot sauce shop buzzing with tourists and shelves lined with gleaming bottles, a ten-year-old burst through the door with the confidence of someone about to conquer an episode of “Hot Ones”.

The boy demands to try the store’s hottest item, a 7 million Scoville firebomb named Hellboy: Right Hand of Doom. The employee politely refuses, explaining it’s not for kids. End of story? Not even close.

Minutes later, the kid returns with his mother. What follows is a scene that feels part comedy, part karmic justice, and fully unforgettable. When the mom insists she can handle it to prove a point, the employee decides to let natural consequences do the talking. Spoiler: it doesn’t end well for her taste buds.

A normal day at a local hot sauce shop exploded into chaos when a kid demanded to try the hottest sauce and his mom just wouldn’t take no for an answer.

Employee Warns Woman About 7M Scoville Sauce, She Laughs, Then Vomits
Not the actual photo

'Sorry ma'am, of course your son can try the 7M SHU Hot Sauce?'

I work in a hot sauce store in a busy outlet mall.

We're a well-liked locally owned business and have many loyal return customers.

But at this particular location we also get a lot of tourists who are curious about our challenge items, or "Hot Ones" products.

We have a large variety of samples available every day.

Literally like 100 hot sauces, 50+ bbq or wing sauces just out on the table.

We can pull another 50 bottles or so from the fridge if one's open.

Every so often we get people who come into the store and ask to try the hottest sauce.

They love jalapenos in their burritos and have eaten habaneros straight.

They're ready to enter the ring, swallow some sauce, and gain admiration of a couple friends and bystanders at the cost of a stomach ache.

We usually try to guide them to the 10th hottest sauce in the store.

We burn them with it, and move on to something mild or medium suited to their taste.

Today while I was selling items to people who were actually paying for things, a 10 or so year old boy enters the store.

I always get wary when children enter the store alone because it is full of glass bottles.

They usually dart straight for the shelves and pick something up.

But this child came barreling towards me like a bullet.

While I make change for the couple buying some sauce, he calls out to me, “Excuse me!”, in a horrendous whiny pitch.

I ignore the rude interruption and continue my conversation with my customers.

He parrots it again twelve times or so back to back as I thank these people and get them out of the store.

Finally, I turn to him, “How can I help you?”

Where the f__k are this kid’s parents.

“Hi can I try the hottest sauce in the store.” Not this s__t again.

I am not dealing with this, not with a 10 year old kid.

I explain to him that the hottest sauce on the table is Hellboy: Right Hand of Doom.

It’s spiked with a 6.66 Million Scoville extract.

Honestly, if you’re not experienced with this kind of stuff more than just a tiny bit can really mess up a good part of your day.

Take my word for it.

I explain to him he has to be 19 years old to try it and sign a waiver.

(which is b__lshit, but I’m off in 30 minutes so f__k this kid)

and instead guide him to a tasty fermented habanero that he coughs his eyes out on before explaining to me

that he could handle the Right Hand of Doom because his dad eats spicy peppers with him all the time.

“Okay.” I say. He leaves, thank God. 15 minutes later I’m interrupted by another customer.

This time a gigantic woman in a blue blouse.

She’s set next to my sample table like a giant blueberry blocking up 20% of my floor space.

“Excuse me!” Apple doesn’t fall far. The customers I’m with are polite and excuse me to speak to her.

“You didn’t let my son try the sauce!” I explain to her that it has extract in it several hundred times hotter than anything he has ever eaten.

It can cause him severe discomfort and I will not let him try it in my store.

I explain that she is free to purchase the sauce and have him try it at home if she so wishes.

She explains to me that she married a Mexican man and that I wouldn’t believe the things they ate in “New Mexico City” where he grew up.

When I asked what they had eaten there she told me “Things hotter than anything we have in the store.”

At this point her daughter interrupts our conversation, I s__t you not, “Excuse me!”

“What?” I’m getting annoyed.

I was annoyed from the second I saw the kid and now he’s back 20 minutes later with three of him.

“Why do you sell Valentina it’s not even a hot sauce?” Jesus Christ. Aren’t you from Mexico?

It says f__king Salsa Piquante on the God damned bottle. It’s 5:50, I’m off at 6. I’ve had enough.

“How about this, you can try the sauce and if it’s as mild as you think, I’ll let him try it.”

She agreed and grabbed her sample stick.

I reached for the Right Hand of Doom and unscrewed the cap.

Its nuclear aroma sent memories of aches to my stomach.

As she goes to dip the stick into the sauce, I warn her to only take a small amount.

She grins at me and dips the stick all the way into the sauce. Trap card, b__ch. She slaps it into her mouth.

Immediately she looks uneasy before she throws herself into pure agony.

She is coughing, swinging her head back and forth, trying desperately to speak, but she cannot muster any words.

She dropped her sample stick in all the chaos.

After a solid few minutes of coughing and dry heaving, she manages a single word, “water.”

I explain to her that water won’t help her now.

My relief walks through the door just in time to witness the finish.

She tells me that the only reason she is coughing is because it went down the wrong pipe.

She then immediately vomits into our garbage can.

She apologizes for spitting up like she didn’t just rocket launch half a liter of chum into my trashcan.

Then she leaves without saying anything else.

I tossed out the trash with a smile on my face and clocked out.

That single act of insisting a child be allowed to do something dangerous “because we can handle it” is more common than it seems. Psychologists call it reactance, the instinct to push back whenever our freedom feels threatened.

Dr. Sharon Glazer from the University of Baltimore explains that people often see safety limits as personal challenges instead of protection. In this case, the mother wasn’t defending her son’s courage; she was defending her pride.

Parenting experts say this kind of “toughness” often hides insecurity. A 2023 Psychology Today article noted that defensive parenting happens when control is mistaken for competence. The mom’s claim that her family could handle extreme heat because of their culture was less about spice and more about saving face.

Spicy food itself is often tied to pride. In places like Mexico, India, Thailand, and Korea, heat tolerance is almost a badge of honor. But as food researcher Dr. Paul Rozin points out, “Liking chili is a learned masochism, the thrill of danger in safe doses.”

A 7 million Scoville sauce isn’t food; it’s a dare. Capsaicin, the compound that creates heat, activates pain receptors and can cause nausea, dizziness, or worse. Water doesn’t help because capsaicin is oil-based, it only spreads the burn.

The employee’s calm reaction showed remarkable boundary-setting. According to The Gottman Institute, firm but respectful limits prevent escalation and teach accountability. By standing his ground, he avoided a dangerous situation and turned a messy encounter into a life lesson without preaching a word.

Here’s what Redditors had to say:

Many Redditors celebrated the employee’s witty professionalism and the satisfying karma that followed.

SnarkHuntr − That is beautiful, precisely the way to handle this kind of parent.

It's unfortunate that her poor kids will likely acquire her destructive attitudes

but I'm glad you didn't make one of them suffer unnecessarily because of their poor upbringings.

hotlavatube − So... didn't want her kid to try it after all?

pb-86 − Brilliant. Really hope the kid comes back when hes a little older thinking hes tough enough then.

I wish we had stores like this in the UK

Some spice veterans chimed in to say even experts know their limits.

alexromo − I always listen to the hot sauce expert even though I am Mexican.

Horrid_Proboscis − I love Reaper sauce on everything, but 6.6mill sounds like something you use to clean f__king engine parts. ..

Others shared their own fiery experiences to prove that underestimating hot sauce never ends well.

jackofallmasterofone − I love this, and as horrible as you make everyone sound for wanting to try hot stuff.

... I WANT TO TRY IT! ​ This does remind me of a mates kid, but in a good way.

judahnator − I have a story in a similar line. I love heat.

I have a fun collection of sauces, ranging from novelty farmers market stuff to name brand like Mad Dog and Blair’s.

A few users appreciated the storytelling itself, noting how realistic and well-written it felt.

lazer_potato − I tried the Mad Dog 357 hot sauce once.

I'm just fine never subjecting myself to that kind of torment again thanks. I'll take my salsa verde and hours of activity instead of suffering.

dummptyhummpty − I once went into a hot sauce store and wanted to try their hottest sauce.

Luckily the guy there suggested that I work my way up to it and gave me some milder stuff first. Haven’t done that since.

And finally, some readers laughed at their own past mistakes, agreeing that you should always trust the expert.

lazer_potato − I tried the Mad Dog 357 hot sauce once.

I'm just fine never subjecting myself to that kind of torment again thanks. I'll take my salsa verde and hours of activity instead of suffering.

dummptyhummpty − I once went into a hot sauce store and wanted to try their hottest sauce.

Luckily the guy there suggested that I work my way up to it and gave me some milder stuff first. Haven’t done that since.

What starts as a simple retail encounter spirals into a fiery lesson in pride, pain, and parenting. The mother’s “we can handle it” attitude literally blew up in her face, proof that sometimes experience humbles us faster than words ever could.

So, what do you think? Did the employee go too far, or did he give the perfect dose of reality? Would you dare to try that sauce? Drop your thoughts below.

Annie Nguyen

Annie Nguyen

Hi, I'm Annie Nguyen. I'm a freelance writer and editor for Daily Highlight with experience across lifestyle, wellness, and personal growth publications. Living in San Francisco gives me endless inspiration, from cozy coffee shop corners to weekend hikes along the coast. Thanks for reading!

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