Jalapeno pepper hands: how to cure the burn

by Newley on July 3, 2004 · 348 comments

[NOTE: this post, describing an accident involving jalapeno peppers, has attracted a huge number of comments. See below. And please add your own thoughts as we seek a cure for this strange affliction!]


jalapeno

I received the following email from a good friend who I’ll call CD. He lives in the Washington, DC area. He sends along this cautionary tale about a cooking experience gone horribly wrong. His story is by turns frightening and hilarious. Enjoy.

Dude, I got a great story for you that I’ll try to relay in this message. Friday night S and I went over to J and C’s. I was going to help C prepare for a catering gig he had on Saturday. So we get there and start boozing and hanging out. We eat dinner and then begin the process of prepping for the catering gig.

Well, one step in the catering cooking process was to roast a 5-pound bag of jalapeno peppers on the grill and then remove the skins and de-seed them. Like what you’d do with a roasted red pepper. Well, at about 10:30pm I belly up to the table outside with all the peppers and start going to town. An hour later, I had peeled all 5 pounds worth….the catch is that I did it with no gloves.

At about mid-night S and I leave and I start complaining that my hands are burning. Not terribly, but a bit of fire. An hour later, we are back at S’s and it really sets in. Pain like I have never felt. Unbelievable, extreme, terrible, super harsh burning pain in both hands and even a little ways up both arms. It was like I had burnt both hands in a fire.

Now, I have to set the time frame so you can get the full affect of how long this pain lasted….it was at about 1am Saturday morning when I really began to realize i was in some trouble. At about 2:30am I woke S up and said I needed help (she had been asleep for about an hour). She got on the Internet and looked up how to stop jalapeno burn. She called two emergency rooms and even a number of “ask the nurse” hotlines. Nothing. At about 3:30am I was in so much pain i was rolling around on the floor almost yelling. By that time I had dipped both hands in milk, olive oil, vegetable oil, yogurt, oatmeal, water with baking soda, a bleach water mix, aloe and even mineral oil. Nothing helped.

At one point, I had both hands covered in aloe, a wet wash cloth on each and my hands in two huge bags that were filled with ice and water. That did not even help. at about 5am S calls my doctor at his emergency number. He says to get in the car and go to the emergency rooms at GW. So, we get in the car and I ride with my hands out the window to let the wind somewhat cool them down.

I check in with the front desk and am taken back to some ER room at about 6am. Now, realize that I am SO embarrassed at this point. Everyone in there is looking at me like I am a freak. They even wrote on the ER board where they identify what is ailing a patient “CD, jalapeno hands.” It was funny as hell.

Once I am in my little holding room they give me a shot a morphine, which by the way does nothing to ease the pain. Damn good high, but nothing for the pain. After the morphine they give me a shot of something stronger which also does nothing for the pain. I even got a shot of straight benedryl because they thought I might be having an allergic reaction. Needless to say, nothing works for the pain. They debated admitting me at one point. They also talked about putting me on some IV of pain killers.

Finally, after being there for about 3 hours, they tell me to go home and basically just wait out the pain. They did give me a prescription for some really strong pain killers.

Well, to get to the end….the pain finally lessoned to where I could take it on Saturday night at about 6pm. I was basically in a living hell for like 18 hours. Even today (Monday morning) I still feel a burning in both hands. If I scratch any part of my body, it immediately starts to burn. I can just bump into something and even that little bit of contact sets off a slight burn. And get this, my feet have this low grade burn from walking on them. That’s how much of the jalapeno oil got into my body.


  • http://JalapenoHands DA

    Tried everything – Tecnu, hand sanitizer, rubbing alcohol, benadryl
    cream, hot water (ouch), cold water, but what finally worked was
    Gold Bond Powder. Instant & continuing relief. Hallelujah!

  • Melissa

    im living in italy right now and i grew jalapenos in my garden because they dont grow jalapenos here. after letting my husband’s family have a taste of them.. his cousin felt the burn and immediately went to the kitchen and used lemon juice. i guess it worked for her. i wish i had a lemon with me know because my hands dont burn but i touched the corner of my eye and i feel the heat.

  • christy

    Thanks for all your tips. I tried milk, alcohol, and lotion, none worked for me. Then, I sprayed my hands with Lanacane, and that really, really helped. But, you have to reapply after awhile.

  • Renee

    Well, Halleileuh for Technu!!! After about 4 really vigorous handwashing sessions and alot of praying I have finally felt some miraculous relief!

  • http://JalepenoEYES!!!!OW! skb

    After letting spew forth a stream of loud profanity, I found you site via the Goog. Just one pepper…my hands are fine, but I just rubbed my eye in a late night attempt to stay awake for the extra innings baseball game, and OW!

    Sadly, there’s nothing here I’d put in my eye…and my dog is avoiding my hands for some reason after a very short “fetch” session…

  • 3 Toes of Fury

    Im so glad to find this thread….i thought i was the only one!

    My question: has anyone investigated if this is an internal reaction vs a topical external one? The burning in my hands is far widerspread than any contact and im questioning if its some kind of alergic reaction??

  • Jennie

    I seeded two jalapenos today and tonight my hands are burning. I slathered hand sanitizer, no luck. Same with caladryl, minimal short relief. Since people said the oils in the jalapenos is the problem so I washed my hands with Sol-u-mel a product by Melaleuca, like tea tree oil. It worked great on my hands. I still have a little burning under my nails but the reileif is great!

  • Sandra

    Rub a spoon or two of sugar onto damp hands, gently massage for a minute or so, then rinse with cool water.

    Also soothing is a slice of bread soaked in milk or water, held against the skin.
    Buena suerte.

  • Schmorgan

    I found this thread for the same reason everyone else did, sadly. I was making salsa and I DID wear gloves and only chopped 4 peppers (albeit the most freakishly hot Jaapenos I’ve ever had)! I must have cross-contaminated my left hand sometime after I took the gloves off though, cause about an hour later my hand started to burn like hell! WOW!

    What worked for me? I scrubbed my hand with handfuls of baking soda and the hottest water I could tolerate 5 times….in between washings I sprayed and massaged my hand with generous amounts of “Goo-Gone” (it’s a cleaner/sticker and crayon remover/degreaser product…it smells like orange-oil and it’s not at all harsh). After that, I was left with only a warmish tingle for the rest of the night, which was almost pleasant (whereas earlier I couldn’t take the ice pack off of my hand for more than 30 seconds and had tried alcohol, lidocaine spray, hand soap and aloe vera gel to no avail).
    I cannot IMAGINE what those of you who chopped pounds of the little bastards with no gloves went through because my hand was on FIRE!!!
    I recommend the baking-soda/Goo-Gone (or likely any degreaser product). Hope it helps somebody!!!

  • Jdq

    My hands were on fire after cutting fresh jalepenos and tried many of the above suggestions except for the poop and urine. I did try milk, washing vigorously, hand sanitizer, rubbing alcohol, first aid burn cream, aloe vera after sun gel, lotion, honey, epsom salt, THEN I used a first aid atiseptic and anesthetic pain relieving cleansing spray that actually worked. After a couple minutes of waiting, the fire was gone. This is a Walgreens brand that is compared to Bactine. After the trial and errors I found something that worked so you may have to do the same. Good Luck!

  • Kelly

    161! My husband and I made jalapenos with cream cheese and bacon. We did this two nights in a row. The first night was fine. Last night, surprisingly, was fine too. I got up, started my morning, took and shower, got out and realized my hands were burning. I thought I had turned the water up to hot! I tried aloe which did nothing at all. After finding this site, I rubbed a few pots, which brought the pain down from “gnaw your hand off” to “this is seriously freaking annoying.” I just coated my fingers with a face mask. I’ve had it on for about 20 min and the pain has stopped completely. Good luck!

  • jeriberi

    162 and I’m laughing SO HARD after reading 161 posts on jalap hands that I can almost recommend a LARGE glass of red wine and reading this list as a way to take your mind off your fiery fingies. As a veteran of pretty much toasted everthing, from privates to contacts, I can only suck it up since I clearly know better. Ditto to the wearing of two pairs of gloves, oils seem to march right through one. and of course, I had none on tonight for roasting those little devils that just needed to picked, roasted and skinned. I clearly deserve a high ranking position in the idiotic rankings of hot-pepper-hand-hood. Just to make it even more fun, I washed a bunch of dishes in hot soapy water which as many have noted elevates your short term misery. LOL ~ thanks to all my fellow sufferers ~ misery LOVES company ~ : )

  • sarah

    without this website, I don’t think my husband would have believed me when I said my hands were about to combust. Tried several things (washing, alcohol; hand sanitizer; aloe); each seemed to work for a few minutes, then burning would come back. Strangest (from perspective of husband, who was trying to get some sleep during all of this) was my coming to bed clutching a large stainless steel mixing bowl and periodically rubbing my hands on it. Finally, 1:30 AM, I went downstairs and made a gloppy mixture of flour and milk, smeared it on my hands. Instant success. Left it on all night (slept with hands folded neatly on chest on a towel) but oddly, when removed the flour in the morning (by soaking in warm water and then rubbing with washcloth), the pain returned. I’m going to the drug store to try the Lanacane/Bactine suggestions! My sympathies for those of you who touched your eyes/noses!

  • http://nancybond.wordpress.com Nancy Bond

    I’m experiencing Jalapeno Hands for the first time after cutting some up to make salsa. We had a bumper crop from 3 plants and I figured salsa was a great way to use some of them up. Arrggghhhh! My hands have been burning for about 3 hours now, and *really* burning. Rubbing the stainless steel does give immediate relief, but for me, it hasn’t lasted. I’ve tried alcohol, olive oil, dish soap, milk/cream and ice. All give temporary relief for about 5 mins and then the burning is back. I’ve learned my lesson!

  • Elisa

    I chopped ONE SINGLE jalepeno for chili I was making at 11am today. It is now 10:10pm and I am in agony with this burning and tingling. I have tried all of the “cures” mentioned here and so far have only found slight relief dipping my hands in tomato sauce. I usually have a very high pain tolerance but this is crazy! (did I mention I am a psych nurse in a hospital???) I am thinking about calling every doctor I know for some kind of relief! I have spoken with 2- they both say “ice & time”. I say the heck with that- I am going to the store to buy booze– TO DRINK MYSELF STUPID)

  • Jennnie

    I cut one jalapeno from my garden and my thumb is on FIRE! I found this site, and the hand sanitizer helped a bit. I also tried some Rescue Remedy (the liquid, not the cream) and that helps a bit too. I’ve never had this happen before, and I don’t know if I will ever ever cut jalapenos again – even with gloves! Thank goodness I wasn’t wearing my contacts!

  • Bonnie

    I love the great tips on here!!

    I baked 2 jalapenos, and peeled them for a recipe. My nose was running all afternoon so at some point I rubbed my nose and got the oil on my upper lip. 3 hours later, I’m not so happy.

    Now I have tried hot water and soap, calamine, tomato sauce, rubbing my hands on stainless steel. The oil in my knuckles still burns. I live in a very small town, and there is no way to buy any of that fancy stuff people mention this late. But after all the washing and other things, it’s not so bad and I think I’ll just try to sleep it off.

    Love all the input though!

  • Bonnie

    I tried one last thing that worked! The note about tea tree oil was excellent. I read that one after my original post #167, and thought….”hey, I have some of that in a foot wash” so I tried it. Instant relief! I don’t understand why it worked, but I’m quite pleased!

  • Keerin

    Ha ha ha…. Yep, I’m like 169 and I’m feeling the pain right now so bad it feels like I shoved my fingers into a vat of acid. And I only cut and cleaned one! And minced it. And moved it. With my bare hands. I didn’t know about Jalapeno burn, but I thought it was the cuts on my hand reacting but this is horrid! And it’s all over! I’m about to go try more things…. Anyway, thanks for the laughs and suggestions!

  • ~LUCKY~

    OMG! I have never felt more stupid in my life. I was given a bag of fresh jalapenos by my friend. I had heard of a great recipe for creme cheese stuffed jalapenos and I thought I would try it out. I wash, slice, and de-seed the peppers and stuff them with creme cheese. About half way through the 20 min cook cycle my hands are ablaze. I have never felt any pain like this in my life. When I was a child I actually had a third degree burn on my arm from a camp fire and this ” jalapeno hands” hurts 10 times as bad as that. I have tried everything. What I did that helps is to take a pumice stone and gently exfoliate your hands while running them under cold water. The pumice stone helps to remove dead skin saturated with the oils from the pepper. I swear by God almighty I will never EVER cut another pepper without gloves so long as I live …..Good Luck to all of those with JALAPENO HANDS ~

  • Lindsey

    I’m so glad to know there are so many unfortunate souls out there such as myself! I’ve cut many raw peppers before without experiencing too much pain, but not tonight! I’m not sure if it is because I’m on accutane and my body soaks up every drop of oil it can find or what. But MY GOD! Excruciating! I only diced up one jalapeno and de-seeded it using my left thumb (seems to be a popular way to do it based on these responses!) only to have the most God awful burning sensation under my nails. I was making fajitas, so I immediately dunked my fingers into the sour cream… made it feel better until I washed it off. Then I tried regular hand soap and a nail brush, scrubbing like crazy even though it was so painful. Genius I am, I decided to put on some Neosporin “Pain Relief” type cream… OMG, do NOT attempt this… it is Pain Maximizing! So then I came online and started reading these posts. Tried Goo Gone, which made it much more tolerable for a few minutes. Then I tried Dawn, which calmed it a little more. I also have a Rub Away bar which is just a stainless steel bar of “soap” and that seemed to help the most at this point. But it started coming back about 10 minutes later, so I dunked my fingers in honey for about 10 minutes and wa-la. That seems to have finished the trick. Of course, my hands look like I’ve been in the Sahara for a month, but at least I’m not biting my tongue in pain. I think I’ll wait until tomorrow to remove my contacts just to be on the safe side!

  • Tony N SF

    I joined the jalapeno hand club tonight! Fortunately, I only de-seeded four and diced them. That was all it took. My hands are very “warm” now: even after multiple hand washings and TWO scrubbings with that really expensive soap for poison ivy (and a couple of stainless steel rubbings). I was making a paste for chicken from a recipe I found in a spin-off from the Joy of Cooking. Of course, no warning re jalapeno hands. Anyway, tomorrow when I actually apply the paste to the chicken I’ll be wearing gloves.

  • bURNING NOSTRILS

    i JOINED THE JALAPENO HANDS CLUB TODAY, I WAS MAKING PICKLES AND SLICED 1 IN HALF AND SEEDED IT. WITHOUT THINKING I WIPED MY FACE, HOLY CRAP!! DID IT BURN, I EQUATE THE PAIN TO THAT OF BEING PEPPER SPRAYED. I WANTED TO RIP MY FACE OFF. I RAN IT UNDER COLD WATER AND SAT INFRONT OF A FAN, WHICH HELPS A LOT, BUT ONCE YOU LEAVE THE FAN, THE PAIN COMES RIGHT BACK. THE WHOLE TIME MY BOYFRIEND IS LAUGHING HIS *SS OFF AT ME, GOSH DARN IT HURTS! GOOD LUCK ALL!

  • carmen

    Hello my name is Carmen and I have jalapeno hand. Mother#@%* it hurts like hell! I cannot believe that I didn’t use gloves when I was told to. I sliced, seeded and diced a 2lb bag of jalapenos and I did not anticipate this pain. I Dipped my hand in milk, iced milk, washed with soap, scrubbed with lemons,soaked in rubbing alcohol and even wore those stupid gloves and filled it with calamine lotion(which made it burn more). I have tried just about everything you guys have suggested even the stainless steel idea but the only thing that helped so far is holding a blue ice-pak. I have 4 of them Ive been alternating but they just dont stay frozen long enough I took 800mg of motrin then when that didn’t work, i took some vicodin I’m rollin but i still feel my hand burning from inside out…I’m so angry with myself arrrrrrgh! I just wanna sleep. But I have to say that i never expected there to be a jalapeno-hand epidemic, but i was wrong…Its kinda nice to know that i’m not alone. Nobody understands how much this really hurts. B/c they wouldn’t be laughing if they knew.

  • jessie

    After reading all of the comments the following regiment worked for me…witch hazel pad to dry up the oil from the pepper, hot water with soap (10 sec. at a time for a minute), rubbed my hands on the stainless sink 30 seconds, and finally applied cortaid. All of the burning is gone and I will be carefully removing my contacts tonight! Thanks for the tips.

  • Corey

    Here I am joining the “Jalapeno Hand” club….WAHHHHHH!!!!!!
    It has been 27 hours since I chopped 3 large peppers and it still hurts. Only cold things relieved the pain at first. I woke up and thought I was fine but no, if I apply any pressure to my fingers it starts all over, then if I don’t touch anything it goes away. It’s getting better but I’m sure I’ll feel it still tomorrow! :( That’s all… it hurts to type.

    P.S. nothing but time helps!

  • jells

    Arrrgghh I’ve cut jalapeno’s before but for some reason the 2 that I chopped and de-seeded tonight left my hands burning :(

    I tried milk, nail polish remover, and proactive solution. I just put some benadryl goup on and it alleviated the pain a little but its definitely coming back. How miserable, never again!

    Thanks for the tips, I feel a little less crazy :)

  • CDW

    I wanted to try a new recipe so I tried making stuffed Jalapenos. What a bad mistake I made. I cut up 25 Jalapenos as the recipe called for & the burning did not start immediately….but when the burning sat in, it stayed with me for like 4 to 5 hours. I am a contact wearer too. I tried all the tips listed. I think time is the cure. Someone told me to use sugar…. But when your hands are burning like this you will try anything. I did!

  • Jane

    Man, I am always told I get melodramatic about things like this but thank god for this giant post of comments! There should really be a warning label when you buy jalapenos! A HUGE label with gloves on it. Stainless steel and sanitizer are what worked for me. I felt quite silly rubbing my hands on my kitchen sink and kitchenaid bowl lol but it definitely took the burn away. I’m still a bit hesitant about taking my contacts out tonight though.

  • Jen

    Me too! Making Christmas tamales for the first time. Didn’t think to use gloves. All was fine until I itched my eye, then my nose, and then my lip. Ouch! I first tried washing it out, but that seemed to worsen the burning. Then I remembered how bread under your tongue helps when cutting onions. So, I took the middle of a slice of bread and smashed it into the corner of my eye. It soothed it, and the burning stopped within a minute. Go figure. I’m glad it worked, but I will now try the rubbing alcohol to get the oils off of my hands! Definitely gloves next time!

  • annie

    Okay, I think I have a story of Jalapeno torture that tops anything here. I made a chili-spiked dish which included Jalapenos and various sorts of other chili peppers. It sent me and my best friend to the hospital with high fevers. For at least a month afterwards, all of my bodily excretions were Jalapeno flavored. The worst symptoms, though, were a weird, trippy feeling, as if I had somehow gotten my brain poisoned. I’m not kidding. This was nearly death by pepper. Turns out, in India, they actually use hot peppers to MURDER people. Thought: maybe people shouldn’t be eating them? Pepper spray, anybody?

  • annie

    Annie here again–so, I can no longer eat Jalapeno, or even Cayenne, without re experiencing a burning sensation and recurrence of the same dizzy spells and gastric burning.

  • Derek

    Misery loves company…ha ha ha, I mean seriously, why isn’t there a warning with these things?!?! I blame Rachel Ray…here I am trying to take the mundane out of dinner with one of her famous slider recipes and now my fingers are absolutely on fire!! In addition to my fingers being a-blaze….I also attempted to fetch a stray eyelash out of my eye and now have a burning eyeball!! Thanks for all the suggestions everyone…I am headed to the kitchen with a quick stop by the medicine cabinet for some experimenting!! Happy Holidays…Jalapeno Free Holidays that is! ;-)

  • Holly

    Fast Orange!!!! that is it! i tried everything, i scrolled and paused to try all the things i saw on this page, fast orange(as in the hand cleaner for mechanics etc.) solved it immediately! good luck all!!

  • MB

    Yeah, I tried vinegar, baking soda, milk, honey, aloe, lavendar oil, paint thinner – and nothing worked – until my husband drove to the store and bought me some Maalox – I had to soak my hands in it for about an hour, but it worked. I don’t ever plan to cook with jalapenos again!

  • candy

    Im going through almost the same thing aside from needing to go to ER.. my sister and I were just preparing dinner together 6 HOURS ago. the strange thing is we were both cutting and removing the jalepeno seeds with our bare hands. So why is it only MY HANDS and FINGERS ARE ON FIRE?!! and she doesn’t feel a thing? Can anybody explain this? we were both handling the same amount. and we’ve been trying milk, aloe vera, yoghurt, sherri vinegar, tar coal shampoo, canola oil, butter, hand soap, dish soap.

  • Katie

    I am like everyone else on this post and I made jalapeno poppers for a dinner party and now my hands sre completely on fire. I cut and took out the seeds around 4:00 on Saturday and it is now Sunday at 2:00pm and my hands are still messed up. I really can’t believe it. I tried milk, hand sanitizer, baking powder, detergent, and lotion. The only thing that helped me was holding a bag of frozen vegetables. That helped and I managed to go to sleep. My hands were okay when I woke up, but I did some dishes and took a shower and now they are back to the way they were last night. I really can’t believe this. I may just start drinking. I think that is the only cure.

  • Brandy

    LOL, its amazing how many people have had this happen! I felt stupid last night, but feel so much better after this site.

    I chopped 2 jalepenos last night for my chili..deseeded them, threw them in the pot and everything was fine until i realized i accidently touched my lip before washing my hands…so after drinking vineger, eating baking soda, etc, it finally went away…i washed my hands VERY well after that. Then a few hours later took my contacts out…i have NEVER felt anything like that in my life…and…like everyone else on here, attempted to put them back in this morning…baad idea. I figured i could deal with a little stinging…not so much! within seconds i couldn’t open it and had to pretty much pry it open. wish i would’ve read these posts before!

  • Ann

    If anyone is looking on this site for an answer, like I was an hour ago, try this:
    Soak your hands in a baking soda paste for 10 – 20 minutes, gently rubbing. This rubs out the oil. Then soak them in cold milk (I had some 2%) for 20 or more minutes. So far this has helped me a lot. I cut up just two (but had dry winter hands, so I believe I absorbed a lot of pepper juice) but now I feel like I have almost no problem. If it comes back I will repeat this. I also had to take out my contacts. My sincere empathy to anyone who is going through this. Hang in there. (Recipes with chopped jalapeno peppers should have a little warning, in my opinion!)

  • Courtney

    I am so thankful for this website! And thankful for the internet!
    Last night, hours after preparing a vegetarian dish from ‘La Dolce Vegan’ which used one serrano pepper, I was just fine. In taking a rather hot bath, I found that when my hands were in the water they BURNED. After I got out I was still in pain. Then I remembered preparing the peppers, and how going to itch my nose actually gave me a nosebleed – I thought maybe it was those peppers.
    This helped me – thank you to whoever posted this remedy: rubbing alchohol, rub that oil off your hands. Then wash with soap and water. Then rub hands on a stainless steel sink. Then swathe on cortizone creme.

    Again, thankful that I was spared a trip to the ER or many remedies.

  • sabine

    My friend told me that peanut butter helps with Asian peppers, do I tried it far my burning jalepeno hands. The pain was lessened. Really rub it in and then rinse your hands under cool water. I will hope for relief for all of you!

  • Fallulah

    OMG!!! I was cutting up a jalapeno and accidentally rubbed my nose! The burning was intense. I found that a combination of shoving an ice cube up my nostril, playing my nose like a violin with a stainless steel spoon (has to be stainless), and swabbing Rite Aid Brand Chloraseptic spray for sore throats into my nose worked quite well. Keep fighting the good fight you all. We will emerge stronger from this.

  • Skate

    My husband made us a nice, romantic, shrimp brochette dinner…. Included several jalapeno’s! Being the good wife I am, I wanted to show him how much I appreciated his gesture… Needless to say, I felt the “burn” of his love in a way I’ve never experienced! Bad idea!

  • http://www.shoprs.com.sg Jessica

    I suffered jalapeno hands yesterday and after five hours of intense burning I found this site, and it helped because some of the comments made me laugh and took my mind off the pain!

    i tried everything from milk, alcohol, baking powder (which I soon learnt is NOT the same as baking soda – painful mistake), hot water, orange juice (helped a little for only for a short while), honey, face mask, powder. The only relief I got was from cool running water but I was exhausted and had to sleep.

    Luckily my bed is right next to the window, so I just stuck my hands out into the freezing cold all night and that helped to numb the pain enough so I could finally sleep. In the morning they are tender but the pain has gone.

    Good luck to all the future jalapeno victims, you are not alone!!

  • Mick

    Okay! The laughter from the stories on this site have at least made this night somewhat tolerable. My wife is in excruciating pain and we have been running through the list, trying everything. Our coffee table looks like a combination of a pharmacy and a farmers’ market.

    My wife wants to be Rachel Ray and cooked a great Jambalaya Pasta dish (despite my skepticism of pasta in jambalaya). The burning on her hands has gotten worse and worse. I’m waiting for her to curse Rachel Ray (“Rachel wasn’t wearing gloves!!”) so that maybe there will be more room on our Tivo for my Daily Show episodes… and maybe even Colbert!

    It seems that one of the variables here is whether the oil is on your skin or already into your skin. She’s gotten some relief from hand sanitizer, alcohol and milk, but not much lasting relief. It’s into her skin. A chef friend said there was no cure then laughed and told her to be careful going to the bathroom.

  • Clare

    I chopped 1 jalapeno yesterday and experienced the worst pain of my life!!! it killed my eyes/nose/mouth for about half an hour- then that stopped and suddenly my hands were on fire for the next 17 hours. only relief was from ice cubes- nothing else remotely helped. everything’s fine now, I had to sleep with both hands in a bowl of iced water while watching 8 episodes of west wing back to back to distract from pain.

    thank god for this website for making me feel less stupid.

  • Amber

    I just was cutting jalepenos and rubbed my nose with the back of my hand and had intense escalating burning. I couldnt believe how painful it was! I though we might need to go to the ER it was scary as I am in Mexico. I tried milk, soap and water and Neosporin with pain reliever and nothing really helped. I put lemon juice on it which stopped it from escalating but did not dull the pain. I cut open an Advil Liquid gel and rubbed that on my face and within ten minutes the pain was gone. Be careful not to get the gel in your mouth as it burns a little because it is so concentrated.

  • FIRE HANDS

    THE ONLY GOOD PART THAT CAME FROM MY JALEPENO HANDS WAS READING ALL THESE SIMILAR FUNNY STORIES! GOOD LUCK ALL!

  • Lisa

    My pain came from an idiotic, albeit innocent, culinary mishap. I was making huevos rancheros when I smashed a bowl w/ a mix cup & had to fish the pottery from the disposal. Lalala. I keep dicing jalapenos. Lalala. Didn’t realize the pottery had sliced up my hands. Lalala. Brunch comes out on time. Yummms… all around. Was the pain considerate or sneaky when it waited till I had loaded the dishwasher to become a red hot flame? Don’t know but I was hoppin’ around doin’ the Hotza Hotza Dance so my guy, him being a scientist, came up with this idea. Realizing jalapenos have lipoxagenaze & cumin has lipoxagenaze inhibitors he suggests I rub a cumin paste on my hand. Didn’t work but I think I’ll keep doing it coz it smells good.
    From everyone’s input; relief comes in any sunburn remedy.
    Ice & patience works for me. A little wine doesn’t hurt either.

  • Spicy Fingers

    I love to make fresh salsa and made it for my new girlfriend a few weeks ago… It was delicious, no burning hands, no problems that is until later that night when we were getting “frisky”

    Let’s just say she doesn’t let me anywhere near her after handling jalapenos anymore. Still together though ;)

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