Harry Kane has figuratively had the sauce to fire England into a World Cup quarter-final showdown with Norway this weekend.However, the Three Lions captain may not have the recipe for success to combat the extreme heat set to await the team in Miami.Water may not be the only way for England stars to cool down in MiamiAFPThomas Tuchel joked last week that he wasn’t given the knowledge that Viagra is a quick fix to cope with the altitude in Mexico City.Thankfully, England stars had the cajones without the need of erectile dysfunction medication to beat Mexico 3-2 with ten men.As the saying goes on EA FC, which was formerly known as FIFA, ‘the heat was on, but [we] stayed in the kitchen, and came out with the ball’.That might prove to be a whole different ball game in Miami, where Stephen Morgan, FOX Weather reporter, delivered a worrying update.He told talkSPORT’s Hawksbee and Jacobs: “For Norway and England, it’s tough in Florida where there is a subtropical climate. It’s really tough to predict where storms will pop up. Storms this time of year pop up almost every single day.“You get this sea breeze and it forms storms over land.“So for Miami Gardens [where England play Norway], starting at 5pm Eastern Time, we could have storms.“If we don’t have storms, we might have a heat advisory that goes into effect. We could have feels-like temperatures even to seas that are about 105 degrees Fahrenheit. That’s about 41 degrees Celsius.“It could be one of the hotter games that England and Norway have had to play.”Due to the severity with which Viagra-Gate was taken, talkSPORT.com stresses the following solution is theoretical, but by all means, get the info across to Tuchel and the players – every little helps!England’s reward for a magnificent performance against Mexico is a quarter-final showdown against NorwayGettyThe tears were real as Crooky, talkSPORT’s chief football correspondent, took the hot wings challenge in a bid to acclimatise to the hot weatherSpicy food helps in hot weatherAs counter-intuitive as it sounds, hot, spicy meals actually help cool the body through an evaporative effect.Put simply, it means that most people sweat while eating spicy food – and perspiration then maintains a body’s heat balance.This is something talkSPORT’s chief football correspondent Alex Crook found out when he tried ‘inferno level’ chicken wings, which he described as the hottest thing he has ever eaten in his life.“I can’t feel my tongue,” he screamed to co-host Andy Goldstein as he sampled the delight outside the restaurant. However, he persevered and conquered the challenge. Turning to the camera, he directed a message to England captain Harry Kane: “If I can do it, you can do it. Come on, England!”Miami is a culinary capital defined by its links to Caribbean and Latin food – which plays perfectly into England’s hot hands.Dr Reuben Chen, chief medical advisor for Sunrider International, has explained that spicy foods can trick the brain into sensing heat through compounds like capsaicin that activate heat receptors in the mouth and digestive tract.“This triggers the hypothalamus to initiate sweating as part of the body’s cooling response,” he told Delish. “The resulting evaporation of sweat from the skin then provides effective evaporative cooling, helping to lower core temperature despite the initial sensation of heat.”“People in India, Southeast Asia, and Mexico have known this for centuries,” Dr John La Puma, a board-certified internist, chef, and two-time New York Times bestselling author, added.Could this little bottle that Kane owns be the difference in Miami?Foraged.comIt’s unlikely Kane took it with him but may need it so his body can cope with the heatGetty“They live in the hottest climates and eat the spiciest food. That’s not a coincidence; that’s physiology.”Kane is England’s secret spice weaponBukayo Saka may seem the obvious go-to for the spice king in the squad, following the release of his PERi-PERi Saka Sauce at a certain chicken restaurant.But the ‘sweet and fiery’ condiment only ranks at around the medium level on the Nando’s PERi-ometer, which simply won’t do.Saka combined his love for BBQ and tomato with Nando’s Peri-PeriNando’s / PAInstead, captain Kane – like Crooky – has already run the gauntlet of the Wings of Death during his 2023 interview on ‘Hot Ones’ where celebrities are interviewed while attempting to navigate rounds of chicken wings, with the level of hot sauce increasing each time.In it, the Bayern Munich striker admitted to host Sean Evans at the start that he’s ‘not great’ around spicy food.In fairness to Kane, he battles through and tackles the penultimate sauce, which has a Scoville Level of 641,000, which ranks 125 to 250 times hotter than a standard jalapeno.“I feel like my mouth can’t get any more burnt,” he said after chomping down on Alchemy Peppers’ ‘Watermelon Ghost’.“You could eat that,” Kane continued. “People who like spice, they could maybe put that on their [food]. Da’ Bomb [sauce eight] one is just a disgrace of a sauce!”Kane was a changed man after his experience eating Watermelon Ghost hot sauceYouTube‘Watermelon Ghost’ is currently sold out online, but Kane received the complete 10-bottle hot sauce lineup for being on the show.Considering the lack of spice in his personal life, all signs point towards that $14.95 (£11) bottle remaining untouched in his cupboard. The worrying thing for England is that Kane is unlikely to have thought to pack ‘Watermelon Ghost’ for his trip to the US and leaving it at home may prove to be a mistake.The humidity issueThe only other potential drawback to England’s spicy meal plan is that the trick works best when sweat can actually evaporate.Which means that Miami’s high humidity may prove a stumbling block to our Chilli con Kane and Taco O’Reilly.Yet there is only one way to find out – Get that cooker on!England vs Norway is live on talkSPORT on Saturday 11 July at 10pm (BST)