There are nine circles in Hell, and I am determined to make it to the last, torturous one.
I wade through the murk of the river Styx, then step over the cold, bloated bodies that populate the circle of Gluttony.
Finally, I make it to the Ninth Circle. The red finger paint on the window reads, “BEWARE: Eat at your own RISK.” Sinning souls jockey for space at the bar while yellow strips of caution tape flutter over above their heads. I pick up a menu which has subheadings like “Lucifer’s Liquid Coolers” (spicy cocktails) and “Entrees from Hell” (eclectic dishes with the zing of Cajun hot mustard or bird chile-lemongrass broth).
I’m in Cambridge’s Inman Square, home of East Coast Grill, who is setting their kitchen aflame for their 100th Hell Night (April 12-15, 2010). For three nights, three times a year, they serve the spiciest food that sadism can muster. For decades, the event has attracted spice masochists the world in the past quarter-century who come to sacrifice their tongues to flame.
I figured if there were any small Asian girl who could handle Hell Night, it would be me. I’m brazen with my applications of Sriracha to dining hall food. I’ve eaten Sichuanese hotpot in Chengdu, which essentially drinking scalding, spicy oil. In frustration over Thai dishes not being hot enough, I’ve literally eaten spoonfuls of fish-sauce laden bird chilies to the admiration of waiters and professional eaters.
photos by Sam Lipoff
But only the truly deranged ask for East Coast Grill’s mythical Pasta From Hell. It’s a dish so hot that they make you sign a consent form. A manager personally requested that I not eat it. “I’ll give you a spoonful for free,” he told me. “Please don’t do it to yourself.”
In the interest of research, I have to. I meet Satan to do the deed. His name is Dr. Pepper, and he’s wearing a felt hat shaped like a jalapeno. His shirt printed with cartoon flames and a string of plastic chiles is looped around his neck. Rasta-colored sweatbands encircle his wrists. He seems positively… genial.
There’s a hellish ingredient in what I’m about to consume. It’s called the ghost chili (naga jolokia) – as omnious as it sounds.
It is the hottest hot pepper in the world. It clocks in at about a blistering 1,000,000 Scoville units.
You do not eat it; it eats you.
Dr. Pepper brings over the orange form. It reads “Hell Pasta Consent,” and the final paragraph describes what I am about to experience after eating this pasta of lore:
“Close your eyes and 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.”
I sign my name.
My dining partners and I had sampled the merely very spicy dishes already without much event. (I was actually somewhat disappointed at the level of spiciness, although the steak and Korean fried chicken were all very tasty.) The pasta came, quivering under its thick application of seasoning. I twirled a generous, wide noodle around my fork and placed it in my mouth.
I chewed. Then I took another bite. It took about 5 seconds for it to hit me. But when it did, I understood what I’d signed up for.
Imagine the hottest habanero you’ve ever eaten. Imagine the rip-roar flash burn of a Jalapeno, the prickly Novocain of a Szechuan peppercorn, the sour sizzle-pop of a hit of Tabasco.
Then multiply that by hundreds of thousands.
Imagine an unchecked forest-fire flame searing your throat and tongue and the roof your mouth to a well-done cannibal’s steak. Water only prolongs your agony. Milk barely dampens the flames.
That, my friends, is the Pasta From Hell.
I barely survived three bites before I succumbed to tears, mouthfuls of cornbread, and half a glass of milk.
But other people were more extreme. The man at the table behind me shoveled the entire thing into his mouth in thirty seconds, then looking pale, ran outside to throw up.
He came back, concerned girlfriend in tow, and declared victory. He’d only thrown up the three glasses of water he’d chugged after the fact.
Dr. Pepper came by with a free t-shirt for the pasta victor and posed for photos. But I knew that the Devil would have the last laugh. Come tomorrow, his digestive tract would burn anew. What goes in, after all, had to come out.

Yes, that's some suggestive lemon eating.
I write two columns for the Crimson, so don’t forget to check out my words of advice (that have been edited by a second pair of eyes!)
Above, I write about what it’s like to trip on Miracle Fruit – the natural berry that turns sour things sweet.
Remember when I wrote about choosing first date places? I give some real, concrete recommendations for Harvard students looking to take that cute guy in boat shoes, seersucker pants, and a pastel Ralph Lauren polo on a date.
Also, another Italian option or two that’s not far from Harvard Square. Yes, I diss Bertucci’s. I admit that I like their warm bread rolls with butter, though.
I did the Saturday afternoon session of Wine Riot (April 17th at the Cyclorama) and am still reeling a week later. This wasn’t your dad’s wine tasting – I saw plenty of 20-somethings in cocktail dresses and fitted t-shirts, unlike the older crowd I usually spot at (more expensive and less boozy) charity food events. Such hip irreverence is reflected in their marketing material and brochure where a sassy, breezy tone abounds.
For example, at the Riot’s photo booth, you can hold up a sign declaring, “I spit.” Or one that says, “I swallow.” Or, if you’re feeling charitable, “Nice legs!”
Ah, wine humor.
It might have been Lingbo swimming aimlessly in the fray had it not been for wine writer Richard Auffrey of The Passionate Foodie, who I ran into after procuring my glass. He kindly led me from distributor to distributor, explaining that I should like whatever my palate liked. (I still suffer a bit from taste insecurity.) The bottles that were being poured were, for the most part, priced between 10 and 25 dollars, eminently reasonable.
After tasting about 7 or 8 wines (I was beginning to get tipsy at this point), he diagnosed me as “sweet, but not too sweet.” I was overjoyed. I’d always worried that I had the diabetes-inducing wine palate of a sugar-starved 3 year old, open to apple juice and nothing else. Among the vino I enjoyed was a nice Merlot from 90+ Cellars, which Rich deemed an excellent value for the price, a Vidal Blanc from Travessia Urban Winery, and very rich, juicy Riesling from Zen Zen Wines, although precisely which Riesling escapes me. TY KU had been pouring a $110 bottle of sake, but I got there after they ran out. Rich, however, assured me that it was excellent. I’d hope so.
There wasn’t much free food to be had, just bowls of Cabot cheese and toothpicks to attack them. I tried to shovel down as many cheese cubes as possible, but I clearly suffered a bit from my lack of drinking fortitude and lack of food in my stomach to soak up the wine. Eventually, the kind people at Upper Crust granted me a delicious slice of pizza. Thanks, guys. You rock.
Edit: To clear up any confusion, there were quite a few excellent food options for a mere $5 – including vittles from the likes of Redbones and Tremont 647. I happen to suffer from overeliance on my credit card. Still, the moral of story is to eat and drink, not just drink. Or just spit. Which brings me to my next point:
*In their brochure, they tell you to spit, so you can enjoy as much wine as possible.
I’m a pizza kind of girl. I’ll politely eat burgers (if placed in front of me) and occasionally bow to burritos (mostly if they’re free), but the cheesy, bubbly slice is my cheap eat staple of choice.
Ever since the New York Times’ Sam Sifton declared Motorino “[NYC’s] best pizza,” I knew I had to give them a try. I took the subway downtown, transferred to the L, then took it to 1st Ave, luggage clattering behind me as I walked into the fabled land of pizza. The restaurant was small, maybe 30, 40 seats, the walls papered in green and white stripes. Brussels sprouts and pancetta pie ($15) came highly recommended.
Motorino’s pizzas are visually arresting creations. They come like jewel-toned paintings, framed in dough and splashed with vibrant colors of basil, buffalo mozzarella, or maybe clams in their shells. I liked the crust on my pie, which was remarkably light, with just the right amount of chew and char. However, it didn’t quite hold up to heavy toppings – it ended up a bit soggy on the underside with oil by the end. Still, it was a delicious creation, and unlikely ingredients were wholly appropriate for spring, nothing like the waxy buttons I’d imagined. Maybe I’d go for a simpler cheese pie next time. Or their lunch special – just $12 for a pie and salad or dessert. Pairing this baby with a cold beer would be awfully nice.

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