Why is mustard irritating for me?












24















I thought I bought mustard, but when I put it on a hot dog and ate it, it didn't taste like mustard. It irritated my nose and sent a shockwave through my skull. So I bought a different brand, but there was not much difference. I feel that irritating, tingling sensation rippling through my head whenever I take a bite. I think it's yellow mustard, the label says "table mustard". I don't recall having this reaction when eating mustard from McDonald's.










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Robert Tattorn is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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  • 3





    Was is similar to horseradish? I think the two current answers are probably spot on.

    – Matthew Read
    yesterday






  • 11





    "Mustard" can mean a variety of things, from cheap yellow McDonalds mustard all the way to a condiment so powerful that people literally likened chemical weapons exposure to consuming it, hence the name "mustard gas." Sounds like you got something closer to that side of the spectrum.

    – Mason Wheeler
    yesterday








  • 3





    Can you post pictures or links to the bottles of irritating mustards?

    – rrauenza
    yesterday






  • 4





    I'm not sure McDonald's mustard actually qualifies as such.

    – GdD
    yesterday






  • 5





    As a Brit, I would classify English mustard - hot and tasty, but not as hot as a proper vindaloo curry; French - probably OK for cheese eating surrender monkeys, or for 5-year-old kids who haven't graduated to English get; American - the same color and potency as weak custard.

    – alephzero
    20 hours ago
















24















I thought I bought mustard, but when I put it on a hot dog and ate it, it didn't taste like mustard. It irritated my nose and sent a shockwave through my skull. So I bought a different brand, but there was not much difference. I feel that irritating, tingling sensation rippling through my head whenever I take a bite. I think it's yellow mustard, the label says "table mustard". I don't recall having this reaction when eating mustard from McDonald's.










share|improve this question









New contributor




Robert Tattorn is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
















  • 3





    Was is similar to horseradish? I think the two current answers are probably spot on.

    – Matthew Read
    yesterday






  • 11





    "Mustard" can mean a variety of things, from cheap yellow McDonalds mustard all the way to a condiment so powerful that people literally likened chemical weapons exposure to consuming it, hence the name "mustard gas." Sounds like you got something closer to that side of the spectrum.

    – Mason Wheeler
    yesterday








  • 3





    Can you post pictures or links to the bottles of irritating mustards?

    – rrauenza
    yesterday






  • 4





    I'm not sure McDonald's mustard actually qualifies as such.

    – GdD
    yesterday






  • 5





    As a Brit, I would classify English mustard - hot and tasty, but not as hot as a proper vindaloo curry; French - probably OK for cheese eating surrender monkeys, or for 5-year-old kids who haven't graduated to English get; American - the same color and potency as weak custard.

    – alephzero
    20 hours ago














24












24








24


2






I thought I bought mustard, but when I put it on a hot dog and ate it, it didn't taste like mustard. It irritated my nose and sent a shockwave through my skull. So I bought a different brand, but there was not much difference. I feel that irritating, tingling sensation rippling through my head whenever I take a bite. I think it's yellow mustard, the label says "table mustard". I don't recall having this reaction when eating mustard from McDonald's.










share|improve this question









New contributor




Robert Tattorn is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












I thought I bought mustard, but when I put it on a hot dog and ate it, it didn't taste like mustard. It irritated my nose and sent a shockwave through my skull. So I bought a different brand, but there was not much difference. I feel that irritating, tingling sensation rippling through my head whenever I take a bite. I think it's yellow mustard, the label says "table mustard". I don't recall having this reaction when eating mustard from McDonald's.







mustard






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New contributor




Robert Tattorn is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











share|improve this question









New contributor




Robert Tattorn is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited yesterday









Kat

141110




141110






New contributor




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Check out our Code of Conduct.









asked yesterday









Robert TattornRobert Tattorn

12413




12413




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Robert Tattorn is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.





New contributor





Robert Tattorn is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






Robert Tattorn is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.








  • 3





    Was is similar to horseradish? I think the two current answers are probably spot on.

    – Matthew Read
    yesterday






  • 11





    "Mustard" can mean a variety of things, from cheap yellow McDonalds mustard all the way to a condiment so powerful that people literally likened chemical weapons exposure to consuming it, hence the name "mustard gas." Sounds like you got something closer to that side of the spectrum.

    – Mason Wheeler
    yesterday








  • 3





    Can you post pictures or links to the bottles of irritating mustards?

    – rrauenza
    yesterday






  • 4





    I'm not sure McDonald's mustard actually qualifies as such.

    – GdD
    yesterday






  • 5





    As a Brit, I would classify English mustard - hot and tasty, but not as hot as a proper vindaloo curry; French - probably OK for cheese eating surrender monkeys, or for 5-year-old kids who haven't graduated to English get; American - the same color and potency as weak custard.

    – alephzero
    20 hours ago














  • 3





    Was is similar to horseradish? I think the two current answers are probably spot on.

    – Matthew Read
    yesterday






  • 11





    "Mustard" can mean a variety of things, from cheap yellow McDonalds mustard all the way to a condiment so powerful that people literally likened chemical weapons exposure to consuming it, hence the name "mustard gas." Sounds like you got something closer to that side of the spectrum.

    – Mason Wheeler
    yesterday








  • 3





    Can you post pictures or links to the bottles of irritating mustards?

    – rrauenza
    yesterday






  • 4





    I'm not sure McDonald's mustard actually qualifies as such.

    – GdD
    yesterday






  • 5





    As a Brit, I would classify English mustard - hot and tasty, but not as hot as a proper vindaloo curry; French - probably OK for cheese eating surrender monkeys, or for 5-year-old kids who haven't graduated to English get; American - the same color and potency as weak custard.

    – alephzero
    20 hours ago








3




3





Was is similar to horseradish? I think the two current answers are probably spot on.

– Matthew Read
yesterday





Was is similar to horseradish? I think the two current answers are probably spot on.

– Matthew Read
yesterday




11




11





"Mustard" can mean a variety of things, from cheap yellow McDonalds mustard all the way to a condiment so powerful that people literally likened chemical weapons exposure to consuming it, hence the name "mustard gas." Sounds like you got something closer to that side of the spectrum.

– Mason Wheeler
yesterday







"Mustard" can mean a variety of things, from cheap yellow McDonalds mustard all the way to a condiment so powerful that people literally likened chemical weapons exposure to consuming it, hence the name "mustard gas." Sounds like you got something closer to that side of the spectrum.

– Mason Wheeler
yesterday






3




3





Can you post pictures or links to the bottles of irritating mustards?

– rrauenza
yesterday





Can you post pictures or links to the bottles of irritating mustards?

– rrauenza
yesterday




4




4





I'm not sure McDonald's mustard actually qualifies as such.

– GdD
yesterday





I'm not sure McDonald's mustard actually qualifies as such.

– GdD
yesterday




5




5





As a Brit, I would classify English mustard - hot and tasty, but not as hot as a proper vindaloo curry; French - probably OK for cheese eating surrender monkeys, or for 5-year-old kids who haven't graduated to English get; American - the same color and potency as weak custard.

– alephzero
20 hours ago





As a Brit, I would classify English mustard - hot and tasty, but not as hot as a proper vindaloo curry; French - probably OK for cheese eating surrender monkeys, or for 5-year-old kids who haven't graduated to English get; American - the same color and potency as weak custard.

– alephzero
20 hours ago










4 Answers
4






active

oldest

votes


















48














As a straight answer to "why" it's the quantity of mustard oil in any given mustard type.



There are many types of mustard, but the two you may find the most confusing visually are English & American.



Though both are a fairly bright yellow in colour, that's about as far as the similarity goes.



Mustard seeds themselves come in many different 'heats' - the mildest generally being pale yellow, almost white & the strongest are dark brown.

Additionally, mixing mustard with vinegar tempers the heat & lengthens the shelf-life.

Mixing instead with pure water increases the punch, but the flavours will dissipate over a much shorter period.



American mustard is one of the mildest available. It starts with a mild seed, pale yellow/white in colour, but the colour is then boosted by using turmeric. The mixture is then diluted with vinegar.

This is your 'standard' mild American mustard, found in many places, including McDonald's. You can slather it in huge quantities on a hot dog with no ill-effects.



Almost at the other end of the scale [Chinese mustard can be even hotter] is English. Made with a mixture of yellow & brown mustard seed, then mixed with water not vinegar, this will take the roof of your nose out if used in injudicious quantities. It can quite literally make your eyes water & your nose run - though if you did it by accident, take solace in the fact that the hit is very short-lived, not like eating a blindingly hot chilli pepper.

The full impact & flavour of English mustard is quite short-lived even in the jar, once made up from powdered mustard. Even ready-made, store-bought has quite a short shelf-life for a condiment. Made at home & mixed with water it will lose its punch in just a few days, so the trick is to buy powder & mix it just 15 minutes before you eat it, for the full experience.



If you're ever uncertain visually which you are about to add - taste it first.



Personally I love English mustard on hot dogs! With ketchup too [one of the only things I will ever put ketchup on]. The balance between the sweet, vinegary ketchup & the hard hit of the mustard is really quite the feast. Bring on the junk food!



There is an in-depth article on the various types at Serious Eats - Mustard Manual: Your Guide to Mustard Varieties






share|improve this answer





















  • 4





    I swear English mustard can remove paint, it's good stuff but a little goes a looong way.

    – GdD
    yesterday






  • 1





    American? It's Bavarian! ;)

    – henning
    yesterday






  • 1





    Once, many years ago, we had a visitor from the US who asked for mustard to put on his steak. He was unaware of the potency of English mustard and proceeded to put nearly a teaspoonful on a single bite sized piece of meat. We tried politely to warn him of the likely effects but... The effects were spectacular and it required nearly a jugful of water to put out the fire. The hardest part was not laughing as he was an important customer.

    – uɐɪ
    22 hours ago








  • 1





    I never thought I'd eat something that'd make me want a hotdog, but this did :D

    – djsmiley2k
    22 hours ago



















15














"English mustard" is also yellow and very very different from typical American yellow mustard as I've encountered it with hot dogs or burgers (French's, for example). A smear of something like Colman's (a typical hot English mustard) has about as much flavour as a spoonful of hot dog yellow mustard.



What you describe is typical for when you think you picked up a mild mustard and it was actually a hot one. It's a mean trick we pay on foreign visitors in the UK (not deliberately). I suspect you're bought a similar product, though I don't know where you are. The heat is different to chilli heat, felt much more in your nose or sinuses than chillies.



Dijon mustard is somewhere in between. A brand available in the US is apparently "Grey Poupon" (originally from France). The Wikipedia article on mustard has more details.



If it is the case that you've bought something hotter than you expect, you can either use it sparingly or dilute it with something of a similar texture - mixing it with ketchup would work if you like both on your hotdog.






share|improve this answer





















  • 1





    How much is a "smear" and how big are your spoons? When preparing hot dogs, I typically take a spoonful of mustard and smear it on the dog, so it's very unclear to me what your first paragraph is meant to indicate in terms of relative flavour.

    – jmbpiano
    yesterday






  • 3





    @jmbpiano it was meant to be illustrative rather than a measurement. But let's say something like 1/2 tsp of English mustard on the tip of a knife and spread evenly would be appropriate for a ham sandwich or one sausage, vs a tablespoon of French's (or a generous teaspoon of Dijon). My French's is in a squeezy bottle but if I spoon out similar mustard from a jar I'll probably lick the spoon. Definitely not with the others.

    – Chris H
    yesterday






  • 2





    If you want to dilute it use yogurt. It keeps the colour and texture and makes it much milder.

    – RedSonja
    yesterday






  • 2





    @jmbpiano I invite you to downvote if you disagree that in the context of condiments any reading other than "a smear is much less than a spoonful" is daft. You do raise a good point about fo those unfamiliar with Colman's which I'll address

    – Chris H
    23 hours ago






  • 3





    @Chronocidal OK, I've never come across "smear" as a noun describing that presentation, let alone the quantity. As a verb "smear a spoonful of sauce across the plate", yes.

    – Chris H
    23 hours ago



















1














Here in Germany, mustard is sold in a variety of "grades".



The mildest variety is called "sweet mustard" or "Bavarian sweet mustard" (süß/Bayrisch süß), it is usually dark/brown in color and only roughly ground.



Then come mild - medium hot (mittelscharf) - hot (scharf) - extra hot (extra scharf). These are usually (but not always) also finer ground.



There is quite some variation in color from pale beige over yellow to darkish brown or even with a reddish tint. You can not conclude hotness from color, though. Nor from grinding/grain size.





Bonus material:



Spicy hotness/pungencyy in German is called "Schärfe" (literally sharpness) and the same word is also used for images being in focus. There was a IMHO really cool ad a while ago for medium hot mustard (Senf mittelscharf) with a slightly blurry (= not really scharf, only mittelscharf) picture of a mustard tube.
Senf mittelscharf






share|improve this answer
























  • Thomy? EGADS. Löwensenf! Careful with their extrascharf, though, that stuff rivals english mustard.

    – rackandboneman
    16 hours ago











  • @rackandboneman: Well, I admit I do I distinguish between ads that are funny to look at which does not imply anything about mustard brands and varieties I eat and buy... But I do say that Thommy had the ad to look at ;-)

    – cbeleites
    15 hours ago











  • I missed an irony smile here :) Though I kind of ... resent the idea of a brand that makes medium quality condiments of all kinds, for brand name prices, to represent german mustard :)

    – rackandboneman
    15 hours ago



















-1














Any type of mustard contains poisonous substances, as every plant, to protect it from being eaten by insects and other animals. Some people tolerate more, some less. It depends on ones state of health, specially if one has a lack of body fluid and other substances to cushion aggressive substances, it feels irritating.






share|improve this answer








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  • this is interesting, as for the fact of people downvoting you.... they are clueless.

    – DeerSpotter
    1 hour ago











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4 Answers
4






active

oldest

votes








4 Answers
4






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









48














As a straight answer to "why" it's the quantity of mustard oil in any given mustard type.



There are many types of mustard, but the two you may find the most confusing visually are English & American.



Though both are a fairly bright yellow in colour, that's about as far as the similarity goes.



Mustard seeds themselves come in many different 'heats' - the mildest generally being pale yellow, almost white & the strongest are dark brown.

Additionally, mixing mustard with vinegar tempers the heat & lengthens the shelf-life.

Mixing instead with pure water increases the punch, but the flavours will dissipate over a much shorter period.



American mustard is one of the mildest available. It starts with a mild seed, pale yellow/white in colour, but the colour is then boosted by using turmeric. The mixture is then diluted with vinegar.

This is your 'standard' mild American mustard, found in many places, including McDonald's. You can slather it in huge quantities on a hot dog with no ill-effects.



Almost at the other end of the scale [Chinese mustard can be even hotter] is English. Made with a mixture of yellow & brown mustard seed, then mixed with water not vinegar, this will take the roof of your nose out if used in injudicious quantities. It can quite literally make your eyes water & your nose run - though if you did it by accident, take solace in the fact that the hit is very short-lived, not like eating a blindingly hot chilli pepper.

The full impact & flavour of English mustard is quite short-lived even in the jar, once made up from powdered mustard. Even ready-made, store-bought has quite a short shelf-life for a condiment. Made at home & mixed with water it will lose its punch in just a few days, so the trick is to buy powder & mix it just 15 minutes before you eat it, for the full experience.



If you're ever uncertain visually which you are about to add - taste it first.



Personally I love English mustard on hot dogs! With ketchup too [one of the only things I will ever put ketchup on]. The balance between the sweet, vinegary ketchup & the hard hit of the mustard is really quite the feast. Bring on the junk food!



There is an in-depth article on the various types at Serious Eats - Mustard Manual: Your Guide to Mustard Varieties






share|improve this answer





















  • 4





    I swear English mustard can remove paint, it's good stuff but a little goes a looong way.

    – GdD
    yesterday






  • 1





    American? It's Bavarian! ;)

    – henning
    yesterday






  • 1





    Once, many years ago, we had a visitor from the US who asked for mustard to put on his steak. He was unaware of the potency of English mustard and proceeded to put nearly a teaspoonful on a single bite sized piece of meat. We tried politely to warn him of the likely effects but... The effects were spectacular and it required nearly a jugful of water to put out the fire. The hardest part was not laughing as he was an important customer.

    – uɐɪ
    22 hours ago








  • 1





    I never thought I'd eat something that'd make me want a hotdog, but this did :D

    – djsmiley2k
    22 hours ago
















48














As a straight answer to "why" it's the quantity of mustard oil in any given mustard type.



There are many types of mustard, but the two you may find the most confusing visually are English & American.



Though both are a fairly bright yellow in colour, that's about as far as the similarity goes.



Mustard seeds themselves come in many different 'heats' - the mildest generally being pale yellow, almost white & the strongest are dark brown.

Additionally, mixing mustard with vinegar tempers the heat & lengthens the shelf-life.

Mixing instead with pure water increases the punch, but the flavours will dissipate over a much shorter period.



American mustard is one of the mildest available. It starts with a mild seed, pale yellow/white in colour, but the colour is then boosted by using turmeric. The mixture is then diluted with vinegar.

This is your 'standard' mild American mustard, found in many places, including McDonald's. You can slather it in huge quantities on a hot dog with no ill-effects.



Almost at the other end of the scale [Chinese mustard can be even hotter] is English. Made with a mixture of yellow & brown mustard seed, then mixed with water not vinegar, this will take the roof of your nose out if used in injudicious quantities. It can quite literally make your eyes water & your nose run - though if you did it by accident, take solace in the fact that the hit is very short-lived, not like eating a blindingly hot chilli pepper.

The full impact & flavour of English mustard is quite short-lived even in the jar, once made up from powdered mustard. Even ready-made, store-bought has quite a short shelf-life for a condiment. Made at home & mixed with water it will lose its punch in just a few days, so the trick is to buy powder & mix it just 15 minutes before you eat it, for the full experience.



If you're ever uncertain visually which you are about to add - taste it first.



Personally I love English mustard on hot dogs! With ketchup too [one of the only things I will ever put ketchup on]. The balance between the sweet, vinegary ketchup & the hard hit of the mustard is really quite the feast. Bring on the junk food!



There is an in-depth article on the various types at Serious Eats - Mustard Manual: Your Guide to Mustard Varieties






share|improve this answer





















  • 4





    I swear English mustard can remove paint, it's good stuff but a little goes a looong way.

    – GdD
    yesterday






  • 1





    American? It's Bavarian! ;)

    – henning
    yesterday






  • 1





    Once, many years ago, we had a visitor from the US who asked for mustard to put on his steak. He was unaware of the potency of English mustard and proceeded to put nearly a teaspoonful on a single bite sized piece of meat. We tried politely to warn him of the likely effects but... The effects were spectacular and it required nearly a jugful of water to put out the fire. The hardest part was not laughing as he was an important customer.

    – uɐɪ
    22 hours ago








  • 1





    I never thought I'd eat something that'd make me want a hotdog, but this did :D

    – djsmiley2k
    22 hours ago














48












48








48







As a straight answer to "why" it's the quantity of mustard oil in any given mustard type.



There are many types of mustard, but the two you may find the most confusing visually are English & American.



Though both are a fairly bright yellow in colour, that's about as far as the similarity goes.



Mustard seeds themselves come in many different 'heats' - the mildest generally being pale yellow, almost white & the strongest are dark brown.

Additionally, mixing mustard with vinegar tempers the heat & lengthens the shelf-life.

Mixing instead with pure water increases the punch, but the flavours will dissipate over a much shorter period.



American mustard is one of the mildest available. It starts with a mild seed, pale yellow/white in colour, but the colour is then boosted by using turmeric. The mixture is then diluted with vinegar.

This is your 'standard' mild American mustard, found in many places, including McDonald's. You can slather it in huge quantities on a hot dog with no ill-effects.



Almost at the other end of the scale [Chinese mustard can be even hotter] is English. Made with a mixture of yellow & brown mustard seed, then mixed with water not vinegar, this will take the roof of your nose out if used in injudicious quantities. It can quite literally make your eyes water & your nose run - though if you did it by accident, take solace in the fact that the hit is very short-lived, not like eating a blindingly hot chilli pepper.

The full impact & flavour of English mustard is quite short-lived even in the jar, once made up from powdered mustard. Even ready-made, store-bought has quite a short shelf-life for a condiment. Made at home & mixed with water it will lose its punch in just a few days, so the trick is to buy powder & mix it just 15 minutes before you eat it, for the full experience.



If you're ever uncertain visually which you are about to add - taste it first.



Personally I love English mustard on hot dogs! With ketchup too [one of the only things I will ever put ketchup on]. The balance between the sweet, vinegary ketchup & the hard hit of the mustard is really quite the feast. Bring on the junk food!



There is an in-depth article on the various types at Serious Eats - Mustard Manual: Your Guide to Mustard Varieties






share|improve this answer















As a straight answer to "why" it's the quantity of mustard oil in any given mustard type.



There are many types of mustard, but the two you may find the most confusing visually are English & American.



Though both are a fairly bright yellow in colour, that's about as far as the similarity goes.



Mustard seeds themselves come in many different 'heats' - the mildest generally being pale yellow, almost white & the strongest are dark brown.

Additionally, mixing mustard with vinegar tempers the heat & lengthens the shelf-life.

Mixing instead with pure water increases the punch, but the flavours will dissipate over a much shorter period.



American mustard is one of the mildest available. It starts with a mild seed, pale yellow/white in colour, but the colour is then boosted by using turmeric. The mixture is then diluted with vinegar.

This is your 'standard' mild American mustard, found in many places, including McDonald's. You can slather it in huge quantities on a hot dog with no ill-effects.



Almost at the other end of the scale [Chinese mustard can be even hotter] is English. Made with a mixture of yellow & brown mustard seed, then mixed with water not vinegar, this will take the roof of your nose out if used in injudicious quantities. It can quite literally make your eyes water & your nose run - though if you did it by accident, take solace in the fact that the hit is very short-lived, not like eating a blindingly hot chilli pepper.

The full impact & flavour of English mustard is quite short-lived even in the jar, once made up from powdered mustard. Even ready-made, store-bought has quite a short shelf-life for a condiment. Made at home & mixed with water it will lose its punch in just a few days, so the trick is to buy powder & mix it just 15 minutes before you eat it, for the full experience.



If you're ever uncertain visually which you are about to add - taste it first.



Personally I love English mustard on hot dogs! With ketchup too [one of the only things I will ever put ketchup on]. The balance between the sweet, vinegary ketchup & the hard hit of the mustard is really quite the feast. Bring on the junk food!



There is an in-depth article on the various types at Serious Eats - Mustard Manual: Your Guide to Mustard Varieties







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited 3 hours ago

























answered yesterday









TetsujinTetsujin

2,126917




2,126917








  • 4





    I swear English mustard can remove paint, it's good stuff but a little goes a looong way.

    – GdD
    yesterday






  • 1





    American? It's Bavarian! ;)

    – henning
    yesterday






  • 1





    Once, many years ago, we had a visitor from the US who asked for mustard to put on his steak. He was unaware of the potency of English mustard and proceeded to put nearly a teaspoonful on a single bite sized piece of meat. We tried politely to warn him of the likely effects but... The effects were spectacular and it required nearly a jugful of water to put out the fire. The hardest part was not laughing as he was an important customer.

    – uɐɪ
    22 hours ago








  • 1





    I never thought I'd eat something that'd make me want a hotdog, but this did :D

    – djsmiley2k
    22 hours ago














  • 4





    I swear English mustard can remove paint, it's good stuff but a little goes a looong way.

    – GdD
    yesterday






  • 1





    American? It's Bavarian! ;)

    – henning
    yesterday






  • 1





    Once, many years ago, we had a visitor from the US who asked for mustard to put on his steak. He was unaware of the potency of English mustard and proceeded to put nearly a teaspoonful on a single bite sized piece of meat. We tried politely to warn him of the likely effects but... The effects were spectacular and it required nearly a jugful of water to put out the fire. The hardest part was not laughing as he was an important customer.

    – uɐɪ
    22 hours ago








  • 1





    I never thought I'd eat something that'd make me want a hotdog, but this did :D

    – djsmiley2k
    22 hours ago








4




4





I swear English mustard can remove paint, it's good stuff but a little goes a looong way.

– GdD
yesterday





I swear English mustard can remove paint, it's good stuff but a little goes a looong way.

– GdD
yesterday




1




1





American? It's Bavarian! ;)

– henning
yesterday





American? It's Bavarian! ;)

– henning
yesterday




1




1





Once, many years ago, we had a visitor from the US who asked for mustard to put on his steak. He was unaware of the potency of English mustard and proceeded to put nearly a teaspoonful on a single bite sized piece of meat. We tried politely to warn him of the likely effects but... The effects were spectacular and it required nearly a jugful of water to put out the fire. The hardest part was not laughing as he was an important customer.

– uɐɪ
22 hours ago







Once, many years ago, we had a visitor from the US who asked for mustard to put on his steak. He was unaware of the potency of English mustard and proceeded to put nearly a teaspoonful on a single bite sized piece of meat. We tried politely to warn him of the likely effects but... The effects were spectacular and it required nearly a jugful of water to put out the fire. The hardest part was not laughing as he was an important customer.

– uɐɪ
22 hours ago






1




1





I never thought I'd eat something that'd make me want a hotdog, but this did :D

– djsmiley2k
22 hours ago





I never thought I'd eat something that'd make me want a hotdog, but this did :D

– djsmiley2k
22 hours ago













15














"English mustard" is also yellow and very very different from typical American yellow mustard as I've encountered it with hot dogs or burgers (French's, for example). A smear of something like Colman's (a typical hot English mustard) has about as much flavour as a spoonful of hot dog yellow mustard.



What you describe is typical for when you think you picked up a mild mustard and it was actually a hot one. It's a mean trick we pay on foreign visitors in the UK (not deliberately). I suspect you're bought a similar product, though I don't know where you are. The heat is different to chilli heat, felt much more in your nose or sinuses than chillies.



Dijon mustard is somewhere in between. A brand available in the US is apparently "Grey Poupon" (originally from France). The Wikipedia article on mustard has more details.



If it is the case that you've bought something hotter than you expect, you can either use it sparingly or dilute it with something of a similar texture - mixing it with ketchup would work if you like both on your hotdog.






share|improve this answer





















  • 1





    How much is a "smear" and how big are your spoons? When preparing hot dogs, I typically take a spoonful of mustard and smear it on the dog, so it's very unclear to me what your first paragraph is meant to indicate in terms of relative flavour.

    – jmbpiano
    yesterday






  • 3





    @jmbpiano it was meant to be illustrative rather than a measurement. But let's say something like 1/2 tsp of English mustard on the tip of a knife and spread evenly would be appropriate for a ham sandwich or one sausage, vs a tablespoon of French's (or a generous teaspoon of Dijon). My French's is in a squeezy bottle but if I spoon out similar mustard from a jar I'll probably lick the spoon. Definitely not with the others.

    – Chris H
    yesterday






  • 2





    If you want to dilute it use yogurt. It keeps the colour and texture and makes it much milder.

    – RedSonja
    yesterday






  • 2





    @jmbpiano I invite you to downvote if you disagree that in the context of condiments any reading other than "a smear is much less than a spoonful" is daft. You do raise a good point about fo those unfamiliar with Colman's which I'll address

    – Chris H
    23 hours ago






  • 3





    @Chronocidal OK, I've never come across "smear" as a noun describing that presentation, let alone the quantity. As a verb "smear a spoonful of sauce across the plate", yes.

    – Chris H
    23 hours ago
















15














"English mustard" is also yellow and very very different from typical American yellow mustard as I've encountered it with hot dogs or burgers (French's, for example). A smear of something like Colman's (a typical hot English mustard) has about as much flavour as a spoonful of hot dog yellow mustard.



What you describe is typical for when you think you picked up a mild mustard and it was actually a hot one. It's a mean trick we pay on foreign visitors in the UK (not deliberately). I suspect you're bought a similar product, though I don't know where you are. The heat is different to chilli heat, felt much more in your nose or sinuses than chillies.



Dijon mustard is somewhere in between. A brand available in the US is apparently "Grey Poupon" (originally from France). The Wikipedia article on mustard has more details.



If it is the case that you've bought something hotter than you expect, you can either use it sparingly or dilute it with something of a similar texture - mixing it with ketchup would work if you like both on your hotdog.






share|improve this answer





















  • 1





    How much is a "smear" and how big are your spoons? When preparing hot dogs, I typically take a spoonful of mustard and smear it on the dog, so it's very unclear to me what your first paragraph is meant to indicate in terms of relative flavour.

    – jmbpiano
    yesterday






  • 3





    @jmbpiano it was meant to be illustrative rather than a measurement. But let's say something like 1/2 tsp of English mustard on the tip of a knife and spread evenly would be appropriate for a ham sandwich or one sausage, vs a tablespoon of French's (or a generous teaspoon of Dijon). My French's is in a squeezy bottle but if I spoon out similar mustard from a jar I'll probably lick the spoon. Definitely not with the others.

    – Chris H
    yesterday






  • 2





    If you want to dilute it use yogurt. It keeps the colour and texture and makes it much milder.

    – RedSonja
    yesterday






  • 2





    @jmbpiano I invite you to downvote if you disagree that in the context of condiments any reading other than "a smear is much less than a spoonful" is daft. You do raise a good point about fo those unfamiliar with Colman's which I'll address

    – Chris H
    23 hours ago






  • 3





    @Chronocidal OK, I've never come across "smear" as a noun describing that presentation, let alone the quantity. As a verb "smear a spoonful of sauce across the plate", yes.

    – Chris H
    23 hours ago














15












15








15







"English mustard" is also yellow and very very different from typical American yellow mustard as I've encountered it with hot dogs or burgers (French's, for example). A smear of something like Colman's (a typical hot English mustard) has about as much flavour as a spoonful of hot dog yellow mustard.



What you describe is typical for when you think you picked up a mild mustard and it was actually a hot one. It's a mean trick we pay on foreign visitors in the UK (not deliberately). I suspect you're bought a similar product, though I don't know where you are. The heat is different to chilli heat, felt much more in your nose or sinuses than chillies.



Dijon mustard is somewhere in between. A brand available in the US is apparently "Grey Poupon" (originally from France). The Wikipedia article on mustard has more details.



If it is the case that you've bought something hotter than you expect, you can either use it sparingly or dilute it with something of a similar texture - mixing it with ketchup would work if you like both on your hotdog.






share|improve this answer















"English mustard" is also yellow and very very different from typical American yellow mustard as I've encountered it with hot dogs or burgers (French's, for example). A smear of something like Colman's (a typical hot English mustard) has about as much flavour as a spoonful of hot dog yellow mustard.



What you describe is typical for when you think you picked up a mild mustard and it was actually a hot one. It's a mean trick we pay on foreign visitors in the UK (not deliberately). I suspect you're bought a similar product, though I don't know where you are. The heat is different to chilli heat, felt much more in your nose or sinuses than chillies.



Dijon mustard is somewhere in between. A brand available in the US is apparently "Grey Poupon" (originally from France). The Wikipedia article on mustard has more details.



If it is the case that you've bought something hotter than you expect, you can either use it sparingly or dilute it with something of a similar texture - mixing it with ketchup would work if you like both on your hotdog.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited 23 hours ago

























answered yesterday









Chris HChris H

19.4k13558




19.4k13558








  • 1





    How much is a "smear" and how big are your spoons? When preparing hot dogs, I typically take a spoonful of mustard and smear it on the dog, so it's very unclear to me what your first paragraph is meant to indicate in terms of relative flavour.

    – jmbpiano
    yesterday






  • 3





    @jmbpiano it was meant to be illustrative rather than a measurement. But let's say something like 1/2 tsp of English mustard on the tip of a knife and spread evenly would be appropriate for a ham sandwich or one sausage, vs a tablespoon of French's (or a generous teaspoon of Dijon). My French's is in a squeezy bottle but if I spoon out similar mustard from a jar I'll probably lick the spoon. Definitely not with the others.

    – Chris H
    yesterday






  • 2





    If you want to dilute it use yogurt. It keeps the colour and texture and makes it much milder.

    – RedSonja
    yesterday






  • 2





    @jmbpiano I invite you to downvote if you disagree that in the context of condiments any reading other than "a smear is much less than a spoonful" is daft. You do raise a good point about fo those unfamiliar with Colman's which I'll address

    – Chris H
    23 hours ago






  • 3





    @Chronocidal OK, I've never come across "smear" as a noun describing that presentation, let alone the quantity. As a verb "smear a spoonful of sauce across the plate", yes.

    – Chris H
    23 hours ago














  • 1





    How much is a "smear" and how big are your spoons? When preparing hot dogs, I typically take a spoonful of mustard and smear it on the dog, so it's very unclear to me what your first paragraph is meant to indicate in terms of relative flavour.

    – jmbpiano
    yesterday






  • 3





    @jmbpiano it was meant to be illustrative rather than a measurement. But let's say something like 1/2 tsp of English mustard on the tip of a knife and spread evenly would be appropriate for a ham sandwich or one sausage, vs a tablespoon of French's (or a generous teaspoon of Dijon). My French's is in a squeezy bottle but if I spoon out similar mustard from a jar I'll probably lick the spoon. Definitely not with the others.

    – Chris H
    yesterday






  • 2





    If you want to dilute it use yogurt. It keeps the colour and texture and makes it much milder.

    – RedSonja
    yesterday






  • 2





    @jmbpiano I invite you to downvote if you disagree that in the context of condiments any reading other than "a smear is much less than a spoonful" is daft. You do raise a good point about fo those unfamiliar with Colman's which I'll address

    – Chris H
    23 hours ago






  • 3





    @Chronocidal OK, I've never come across "smear" as a noun describing that presentation, let alone the quantity. As a verb "smear a spoonful of sauce across the plate", yes.

    – Chris H
    23 hours ago








1




1





How much is a "smear" and how big are your spoons? When preparing hot dogs, I typically take a spoonful of mustard and smear it on the dog, so it's very unclear to me what your first paragraph is meant to indicate in terms of relative flavour.

– jmbpiano
yesterday





How much is a "smear" and how big are your spoons? When preparing hot dogs, I typically take a spoonful of mustard and smear it on the dog, so it's very unclear to me what your first paragraph is meant to indicate in terms of relative flavour.

– jmbpiano
yesterday




3




3





@jmbpiano it was meant to be illustrative rather than a measurement. But let's say something like 1/2 tsp of English mustard on the tip of a knife and spread evenly would be appropriate for a ham sandwich or one sausage, vs a tablespoon of French's (or a generous teaspoon of Dijon). My French's is in a squeezy bottle but if I spoon out similar mustard from a jar I'll probably lick the spoon. Definitely not with the others.

– Chris H
yesterday





@jmbpiano it was meant to be illustrative rather than a measurement. But let's say something like 1/2 tsp of English mustard on the tip of a knife and spread evenly would be appropriate for a ham sandwich or one sausage, vs a tablespoon of French's (or a generous teaspoon of Dijon). My French's is in a squeezy bottle but if I spoon out similar mustard from a jar I'll probably lick the spoon. Definitely not with the others.

– Chris H
yesterday




2




2





If you want to dilute it use yogurt. It keeps the colour and texture and makes it much milder.

– RedSonja
yesterday





If you want to dilute it use yogurt. It keeps the colour and texture and makes it much milder.

– RedSonja
yesterday




2




2





@jmbpiano I invite you to downvote if you disagree that in the context of condiments any reading other than "a smear is much less than a spoonful" is daft. You do raise a good point about fo those unfamiliar with Colman's which I'll address

– Chris H
23 hours ago





@jmbpiano I invite you to downvote if you disagree that in the context of condiments any reading other than "a smear is much less than a spoonful" is daft. You do raise a good point about fo those unfamiliar with Colman's which I'll address

– Chris H
23 hours ago




3




3





@Chronocidal OK, I've never come across "smear" as a noun describing that presentation, let alone the quantity. As a verb "smear a spoonful of sauce across the plate", yes.

– Chris H
23 hours ago





@Chronocidal OK, I've never come across "smear" as a noun describing that presentation, let alone the quantity. As a verb "smear a spoonful of sauce across the plate", yes.

– Chris H
23 hours ago











1














Here in Germany, mustard is sold in a variety of "grades".



The mildest variety is called "sweet mustard" or "Bavarian sweet mustard" (süß/Bayrisch süß), it is usually dark/brown in color and only roughly ground.



Then come mild - medium hot (mittelscharf) - hot (scharf) - extra hot (extra scharf). These are usually (but not always) also finer ground.



There is quite some variation in color from pale beige over yellow to darkish brown or even with a reddish tint. You can not conclude hotness from color, though. Nor from grinding/grain size.





Bonus material:



Spicy hotness/pungencyy in German is called "Schärfe" (literally sharpness) and the same word is also used for images being in focus. There was a IMHO really cool ad a while ago for medium hot mustard (Senf mittelscharf) with a slightly blurry (= not really scharf, only mittelscharf) picture of a mustard tube.
Senf mittelscharf






share|improve this answer
























  • Thomy? EGADS. Löwensenf! Careful with their extrascharf, though, that stuff rivals english mustard.

    – rackandboneman
    16 hours ago











  • @rackandboneman: Well, I admit I do I distinguish between ads that are funny to look at which does not imply anything about mustard brands and varieties I eat and buy... But I do say that Thommy had the ad to look at ;-)

    – cbeleites
    15 hours ago











  • I missed an irony smile here :) Though I kind of ... resent the idea of a brand that makes medium quality condiments of all kinds, for brand name prices, to represent german mustard :)

    – rackandboneman
    15 hours ago
















1














Here in Germany, mustard is sold in a variety of "grades".



The mildest variety is called "sweet mustard" or "Bavarian sweet mustard" (süß/Bayrisch süß), it is usually dark/brown in color and only roughly ground.



Then come mild - medium hot (mittelscharf) - hot (scharf) - extra hot (extra scharf). These are usually (but not always) also finer ground.



There is quite some variation in color from pale beige over yellow to darkish brown or even with a reddish tint. You can not conclude hotness from color, though. Nor from grinding/grain size.





Bonus material:



Spicy hotness/pungencyy in German is called "Schärfe" (literally sharpness) and the same word is also used for images being in focus. There was a IMHO really cool ad a while ago for medium hot mustard (Senf mittelscharf) with a slightly blurry (= not really scharf, only mittelscharf) picture of a mustard tube.
Senf mittelscharf






share|improve this answer
























  • Thomy? EGADS. Löwensenf! Careful with their extrascharf, though, that stuff rivals english mustard.

    – rackandboneman
    16 hours ago











  • @rackandboneman: Well, I admit I do I distinguish between ads that are funny to look at which does not imply anything about mustard brands and varieties I eat and buy... But I do say that Thommy had the ad to look at ;-)

    – cbeleites
    15 hours ago











  • I missed an irony smile here :) Though I kind of ... resent the idea of a brand that makes medium quality condiments of all kinds, for brand name prices, to represent german mustard :)

    – rackandboneman
    15 hours ago














1












1








1







Here in Germany, mustard is sold in a variety of "grades".



The mildest variety is called "sweet mustard" or "Bavarian sweet mustard" (süß/Bayrisch süß), it is usually dark/brown in color and only roughly ground.



Then come mild - medium hot (mittelscharf) - hot (scharf) - extra hot (extra scharf). These are usually (but not always) also finer ground.



There is quite some variation in color from pale beige over yellow to darkish brown or even with a reddish tint. You can not conclude hotness from color, though. Nor from grinding/grain size.





Bonus material:



Spicy hotness/pungencyy in German is called "Schärfe" (literally sharpness) and the same word is also used for images being in focus. There was a IMHO really cool ad a while ago for medium hot mustard (Senf mittelscharf) with a slightly blurry (= not really scharf, only mittelscharf) picture of a mustard tube.
Senf mittelscharf






share|improve this answer













Here in Germany, mustard is sold in a variety of "grades".



The mildest variety is called "sweet mustard" or "Bavarian sweet mustard" (süß/Bayrisch süß), it is usually dark/brown in color and only roughly ground.



Then come mild - medium hot (mittelscharf) - hot (scharf) - extra hot (extra scharf). These are usually (but not always) also finer ground.



There is quite some variation in color from pale beige over yellow to darkish brown or even with a reddish tint. You can not conclude hotness from color, though. Nor from grinding/grain size.





Bonus material:



Spicy hotness/pungencyy in German is called "Schärfe" (literally sharpness) and the same word is also used for images being in focus. There was a IMHO really cool ad a while ago for medium hot mustard (Senf mittelscharf) with a slightly blurry (= not really scharf, only mittelscharf) picture of a mustard tube.
Senf mittelscharf







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered 23 hours ago









cbeleitescbeleites

33116




33116













  • Thomy? EGADS. Löwensenf! Careful with their extrascharf, though, that stuff rivals english mustard.

    – rackandboneman
    16 hours ago











  • @rackandboneman: Well, I admit I do I distinguish between ads that are funny to look at which does not imply anything about mustard brands and varieties I eat and buy... But I do say that Thommy had the ad to look at ;-)

    – cbeleites
    15 hours ago











  • I missed an irony smile here :) Though I kind of ... resent the idea of a brand that makes medium quality condiments of all kinds, for brand name prices, to represent german mustard :)

    – rackandboneman
    15 hours ago



















  • Thomy? EGADS. Löwensenf! Careful with their extrascharf, though, that stuff rivals english mustard.

    – rackandboneman
    16 hours ago











  • @rackandboneman: Well, I admit I do I distinguish between ads that are funny to look at which does not imply anything about mustard brands and varieties I eat and buy... But I do say that Thommy had the ad to look at ;-)

    – cbeleites
    15 hours ago











  • I missed an irony smile here :) Though I kind of ... resent the idea of a brand that makes medium quality condiments of all kinds, for brand name prices, to represent german mustard :)

    – rackandboneman
    15 hours ago

















Thomy? EGADS. Löwensenf! Careful with their extrascharf, though, that stuff rivals english mustard.

– rackandboneman
16 hours ago





Thomy? EGADS. Löwensenf! Careful with their extrascharf, though, that stuff rivals english mustard.

– rackandboneman
16 hours ago













@rackandboneman: Well, I admit I do I distinguish between ads that are funny to look at which does not imply anything about mustard brands and varieties I eat and buy... But I do say that Thommy had the ad to look at ;-)

– cbeleites
15 hours ago





@rackandboneman: Well, I admit I do I distinguish between ads that are funny to look at which does not imply anything about mustard brands and varieties I eat and buy... But I do say that Thommy had the ad to look at ;-)

– cbeleites
15 hours ago













I missed an irony smile here :) Though I kind of ... resent the idea of a brand that makes medium quality condiments of all kinds, for brand name prices, to represent german mustard :)

– rackandboneman
15 hours ago





I missed an irony smile here :) Though I kind of ... resent the idea of a brand that makes medium quality condiments of all kinds, for brand name prices, to represent german mustard :)

– rackandboneman
15 hours ago











-1














Any type of mustard contains poisonous substances, as every plant, to protect it from being eaten by insects and other animals. Some people tolerate more, some less. It depends on ones state of health, specially if one has a lack of body fluid and other substances to cushion aggressive substances, it feels irritating.






share|improve this answer








New contributor




Pilso is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.





















  • this is interesting, as for the fact of people downvoting you.... they are clueless.

    – DeerSpotter
    1 hour ago
















-1














Any type of mustard contains poisonous substances, as every plant, to protect it from being eaten by insects and other animals. Some people tolerate more, some less. It depends on ones state of health, specially if one has a lack of body fluid and other substances to cushion aggressive substances, it feels irritating.






share|improve this answer








New contributor




Pilso is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.





















  • this is interesting, as for the fact of people downvoting you.... they are clueless.

    – DeerSpotter
    1 hour ago














-1












-1








-1







Any type of mustard contains poisonous substances, as every plant, to protect it from being eaten by insects and other animals. Some people tolerate more, some less. It depends on ones state of health, specially if one has a lack of body fluid and other substances to cushion aggressive substances, it feels irritating.






share|improve this answer








New contributor




Pilso is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.










Any type of mustard contains poisonous substances, as every plant, to protect it from being eaten by insects and other animals. Some people tolerate more, some less. It depends on ones state of health, specially if one has a lack of body fluid and other substances to cushion aggressive substances, it feels irritating.







share|improve this answer








New contributor




Pilso is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer






New contributor




Pilso is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









answered 3 hours ago









PilsoPilso

11




11




New contributor




Pilso is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.





New contributor





Pilso is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






Pilso is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.













  • this is interesting, as for the fact of people downvoting you.... they are clueless.

    – DeerSpotter
    1 hour ago



















  • this is interesting, as for the fact of people downvoting you.... they are clueless.

    – DeerSpotter
    1 hour ago

















this is interesting, as for the fact of people downvoting you.... they are clueless.

– DeerSpotter
1 hour ago





this is interesting, as for the fact of people downvoting you.... they are clueless.

– DeerSpotter
1 hour ago










Robert Tattorn is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.










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Robert Tattorn is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.












Robert Tattorn is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
















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