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Thai Spice Levels From Mai Phet to Nuclear (Free Quiz)

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Thai Spice Level Quiz Banner - Learn 6 heat levels from mai phet to nuclear along with basic Thai flavor vocabulary using an interactive audio game
Thai Spice Levels learning illustration showing progressive heat meters from mai phet to nuclear with basic flavor vocabulary, interactive spice-selection practice, and culinary decoding skills.

My first encounter with Thai-level spicy happened at a som tam stall in a covered market in Nakhon Ratchasima. I had ordered som tam Thai — papaya salad, the version with peanuts and dried shrimp rather than the more aggressive Isan version — and I thought I had been appropriately cautious. I had not said phet mak. I had not asked for extra chili. I had simply smiled and pointed, and the vendor had made it the way she made it for everyone.

What arrived was deeply, beautifully, catastrophically spicy. Not unpleasant — genuinely delicious — but operating at a heat level I had previously believed to be theoretical. The vendor watched me eat the first bite with mild scientific curiosity. I said ⏭⏪่⏭ā¸ĸā¸Ąā¸˛ā¸. She looked pleased. I said āš€ā¸œ็ā¸”ā¸Ąā¸˛ā¸ with a combination of admiration and existential crisis. She laughed and said something in Thai I could not understand but which I suspect translated to "yes, I know."

This quiz teaches you two things. First, the complete Thai spice vocabulary so you can communicate your exact heat preference before it becomes a medical situation. Second, the broader flavor vocabulary of Thai cuisine — sweet, sour, salty, bitter — because understanding Thai food is about understanding how all these flavors work together, not just the chili.

The Complete Thai Spice Scale

Thai has a precise, graduated vocabulary for heat level. Here is the full spectrum from gentlest to most dangerous, with the honest translation of what each level means in practice:

āš„ā¸Ą่āš€ā¸œ็⏔
mai phet
😌
āš€ā¸œ็⏔⏙ิ⏔ā¸Ģ⏙่⏭ā¸ĸ
phet nit noi
đŸŒļ️
āš€ā¸œ็⏔
phet
đŸŒļ️đŸŒļ️
āš€ā¸œ็ā¸”ā¸Ąā¸˛ā¸
phet mak
đŸŒļ️đŸŒļ️đŸŒļ️
āš€ā¸œ็ā¸”ā¸Ąā¸˛ā¸āš†
phet mak mak
đŸ”ĨđŸ”ĨđŸ”Ĩ
āš€ā¸œ็⏔⏗ี่ā¸Ēุ⏔
phet thi sut
☢️

A crucial translation note: Thai "spicy" operates on a completely different baseline than most Western countries. What a local vendor considers āš€ā¸œ็⏔⏙ิ⏔ā¸Ģ⏙่⏭ā¸ĸ (a little spicy) may already be more heat than a foreign visitor expects. For most travelers, āš„ā¸Ą่āš€ā¸œ็⏔ or āš€ā¸œ็⏔⏙ิ⏔ā¸Ģ⏙่⏭ā¸ĸ are the safe starting points. You can always escalate. Descending from nuclear is not possible.

đŸŒļ️ The Calibration Trick: On your first day in Thailand, order the same dish twice — once with āš„ā¸Ą่āš€ā¸œ็⏔ and once with āš€ā¸œ็⏔⏙ิ⏔ā¸Ģ⏙่⏭ā¸ĸ. Note the difference. That gap tells you exactly where the local heat scale starts. Then you can communicate precisely what you want for the rest of the trip.

Beyond Spice: The Five Flavors of Thai Cuisine

Thai cooking is not just about heat. It is built on the deliberate balance of five fundamental flavors, and understanding all of them gives you the vocabulary to describe — and request — food with real precision:

đŸŒļ️ āš€ā¸œ็⏔ phet Spicy / Hot Chili heat, capsaicin burn
đŸ¯ ā¸Ģ⏧⏞⏙ wan Sweet Palm sugar, coconut milk
🍋 āš€ā¸›ā¸Ŗี้ā¸ĸ⏧ prio Sour Lime, tamarind, vinegar
🧂 āš€ā¸„็ā¸Ą kem Salty Fish sauce, soy sauce
đŸŒŋ ā¸‚ā¸Ą khom Bitter Bitter melon, certain herbs
đŸĨĨ ā¸Ąั⏙ man Rich / Oily / Umami Coconut cream, nut oils

The art of Thai cooking is in the balance between these flavors. A great som tam is simultaneously āš€ā¸œ็⏔ (spicy), āš€ā¸›ā¸Ŗี้ā¸ĸ⏧ (sour from lime), ā¸Ģ⏧⏞⏙ (sweet from palm sugar), and āš€ā¸„็ā¸Ą (salty from fish sauce) — often hitting all four in the same bite. When a dish feels flat, it is usually because one of these elements is missing or out of proportion.

Thai Chili Varieties — Know Your Enemy

Not all Thai chilies are equal. The difference between what ends up in your dish depends enormously on which variety the cook uses:

đŸĢ‘
Prik Yuak
ā¸žā¸Ŗิ⏁ā¸Ģā¸ĸ⏧⏁
prik yuak
💚 Mild — like bell pepper
Long green chili, almost no heat. Used for color and mild flavor.
đŸŒļ️
Prik Chi Faa
ā¸žā¸Ŗิ⏁⏊ี้⏟้⏞
prik chi faa
🟡 Medium — familiar heat
Long red or green chili, moderate heat. Very common in Thai cooking.
🔴
Prik Khi Nu
ā¸žā¸Ŗิ⏁⏂ี้ā¸Ģ⏙ู
prik khi nu
🔴 Very hot — intense burn
Bird's eye chili, tiny and devastating. The main culprit in very spicy Thai food.
🟠
Prik Haeng
ā¸žā¸Ŗิā¸āšā¸Ģ้⏇
prik haeng
🟠 Varies — deeper flavor
Dried chili, used in curry pastes and stir-fries. Smoky, complex heat.

Flavor Modifiers — Complete Your Order

Once you know the flavor words, you can combine them with modifiers to request exactly what you want. The pattern is simple: flavor word + ⏙ิ⏔ā¸Ģ⏙่⏭ā¸ĸ (nit noi — a little) or + ā¸Ąā¸˛ā¸ (mak — a lot).

ā¸Ģ⏧⏞⏙⏙ิ⏔ā¸Ģ⏙่⏭ā¸ĸ (wan nit noi) — a little sweet. Useful when you want coconut-based dishes slightly less rich.

āš€ā¸›ā¸Ŗี้ā¸ĸā¸§ā¸Ąā¸˛ā¸ (prio mak) — very sour. For those who love extra lime in their tom yum or som tam.

āš„ā¸Ą่āš€ā¸„็ā¸Ą (mai kem) — not salty. Useful for people managing sodium intake.

āš„ā¸Ą่āšƒā¸Ē่ā¸žā¸Ŗิ⏁ (mai sai prik) — no chili at all, even milder than mai phet.

The word ⏈ื⏔ (joot — bland/tasteless) is worth knowing as a concept even if you never need to use it. It describes food that is underseasoned — too little of all flavors — and Thai cooks consider it a negative quality. Knowing this word helps you understand why a Thai cook might look puzzled if you ask for something that is mai phet, mai kem, and mai wan simultaneously. They are trying to reconcile your request with their understanding of what makes food worth eating.

🔗 Complete the Food Series:
Post 05 — Thai Street Food: 10 Essential Dishes
Post 11 — How to Order Food in Thai
Post 12 — Spice Levels (you are here)
⬜ Post 13 — Thai Drinks Quiz (coming next)

Reading the Table — Condiments and Self-Service Spice

One of the most useful things to understand about Thai street food is the condiment station. At most noodle shops and casual restaurants, a set of four containers sits on the table. These are your personal spice controls, and knowing what they are saves you from accidentally destroying your meal:

Container 1 — ā¸žā¸Ŗิ⏁⏛่⏙ (prik pon): Dried chili flakes. The most controlled way to add heat — you can add a pinch and taste before committing to more.

Container 2 — ⏙้⏺⏕⏞ā¸Ĩ (nam tan): Sugar. Thai noodle soups often need a pinch of sugar to balance the saltiness of fish sauce. This surprises many Western visitors.

Container 3 — ⏙้⏺ā¸Ē้ā¸Ąā¸žā¸Ŗิ⏁ (nam som prik): Vinegar with chilies. Adds sourness and mild heat together.

Container 4 — ⏙้⏺⏛ā¸Ĩ⏞ (nam pla): Fish sauce. The primary salt source in Thai cooking, with a depth of umami that regular salt cannot match.

The correct approach is to taste your dish first, then adjust with these four containers in small increments. The Thai way is to taste and refine rather than season in advance. Watching how locals interact with the condiment station at a noodle shop is a genuine education in Thai flavor philosophy. đŸŒļ️

đŸŒļ️ How to Play

  • 1
    See a Thai spice or flavor word with romanization
  • 2
    Press Listen to hear it in Thai
  • 3
    Choose the correct meaning from 4 options
  • 4
    3 in a row earns a streak bonus!
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What does this Thai word mean?

āš€ā¸œ็⏔
phet

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📋 Spice & Flavor Reference

Thai Romanized Meaning Heat
āš„ā¸Ą่āš€ā¸œ็⏔mai phetNot spicy😌
āš€ā¸œ็⏔⏙ิ⏔ā¸Ģ⏙่⏭ā¸ĸphet nit noiA little spicyđŸŒļ️
āš€ā¸œ็⏔phetSpicyđŸŒļ️đŸŒļ️
āš€ā¸œ็ā¸”ā¸Ąā¸˛ā¸phet makVery spicyđŸŒļ️đŸŒļ️đŸŒļ️
āš€ā¸œ็ā¸”ā¸Ąā¸˛ā¸āš†phet mak makExtremely spicyđŸ”ĨđŸ”ĨđŸ”Ĩ
āš€ā¸œ็⏔⏗ี่ā¸Ēุ⏔phet thi sutSpiciest possible☢️
ā¸Ģ⏧⏞⏙wanSweetđŸ¯
āš€ā¸›ā¸Ŗี้ā¸ĸ⏧prioSour🍋
āš€ā¸„็ā¸ĄkemSalty🧂
ā¸‚ā¸ĄkhomBitterđŸŒŋ
⏈ื⏔jootBland / tastelessđŸ˜ļ

đŸŒļ️ Deep Dive: Thai Chili Culture

Thailand is one of the world's great chili-eating nations, a status achieved relatively recently in historical terms. Chili peppers are native to the Americas and arrived in Southeast Asia only in the 16th century via Portuguese traders. Before chili, Thai food achieved its heat from long pepper, ginger, and galangal. The transformation of Thai cuisine after chili's arrival took roughly two centuries and produced one of the world's most chili-forward culinary traditions.

Regional Spice Differences

Spice levels in Thailand vary dramatically by region. Isan cuisine (northeastern Thailand) is generally considered the spiciest — dishes like lab (spiced minced meat salad) and raw papaya som tam are made with quantities of bird's eye chili that would be extreme by any standard. Southern Thai cuisine is also intensely spicy, with the addition of turmeric-based curries. Central Thai (Bangkok) cuisine tends toward more balanced heat, and Northern Thai cuisine often features milder, herb-forward flavors. If you are traveling to Isan or the south, recalibrate your spice expectations accordingly.

Why Thai Food Tastes Different at Home

Thai restaurants outside Thailand frequently adjust their recipes for local palates — less fish sauce, less sugar, less chili. This means that people who eat Thai food regularly in Western countries and consider themselves capable of handling "medium spicy" may be significantly underestimating what Thai spicy means at a local stall in Thailand. The recalibration is worth experiencing, but do it gradually.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

How do I say not spicy in Thai?
āš„ā¸Ą่āš€ā¸œ็⏔ (mai phet) — mai = not, phet = spicy. Add ⏄⏪ั⏚/⏄่⏰ for politeness. This is the single most useful food phrase for heat-sensitive travelers in Thailand.
What are all the Thai spice levels?
In order: āš„ā¸Ą่āš€ā¸œ็⏔ (not spicy) → āš€ā¸œ็⏔⏙ิ⏔ā¸Ģ⏙่⏭ā¸ĸ (a little spicy) → āš€ā¸œ็⏔ (spicy) → āš€ā¸œ็ā¸”ā¸Ąā¸˛ā¸ (very spicy) → āš€ā¸œ็ā¸”ā¸Ąā¸˛ā¸āš† (extremely spicy) → āš€ā¸œ็⏔⏗ี่ā¸Ēุ⏔ (spiciest possible). Each level represents a significant escalation by international standards.
What does phet mean in Thai?
āš€ā¸œ็⏔ means spicy or hot in the sense of chili heat — not temperature. For temperature, Thai uses ⏪้⏭⏙ (hot) and āš€ā¸ĸ็⏙ (cold). Phet mak = very spicy, phet nit noi = a little spicy.
What are the five basic tastes in Thai cuisine?
Thai cuisine balances five flavors: āš€ā¸œ็⏔ (spicy), ā¸Ģ⏧⏞⏙ (sweet), āš€ā¸›ā¸Ŗี้ā¸ĸ⏧ (sour), āš€ā¸„็ā¸Ą (salty), and ā¸‚ā¸Ą (bitter). Most Thai dishes combine several of these deliberately — the balance between them is the hallmark of authentic Thai cooking.
How spicy is phet mak in Thailand?
āš€ā¸œ็ā¸”ā¸Ąā¸˛ā¸ is calibrated for Thai palates that have eaten chilies since childhood. For most foreign visitors, it is significantly hotter than expected. Start with āš€ā¸œ็⏔⏙ิ⏔ā¸Ģ⏙่⏭ā¸ĸ (a little spicy) and escalate gradually. You can always add heat; you cannot remove it.
Is Thai food always spicy?
No. Many Thai dishes are naturally mild — khao man gai, khao pad, and pad see ew are typically gentle. Most dishes can be ordered with āš„ā¸Ą่āš€ā¸œ็⏔ (not spicy) and the vendor will accommodate. Spice level is almost always adjustable.

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