Cayenne Pepper — Cups to Grams
1 cup cayenne pepper = 90 grams (1 tsp = 1.8g)
1 cup Cayenne Pepper = 90 grams
Quick Conversion Table — Cayenne Pepper
| Cups | Grams | Tablespoons | Teaspoons |
|---|---|---|---|
| ¼ | 22.5 g | 4.25 tbsp | 12.5 tsp |
| ⅓ | 30 g | 5.66 tbsp | 16.7 tsp |
| ½ | 45 g | 8.49 tbsp | 25 tsp |
| ⅔ | 60 g | 11.3 tbsp | 33.3 tsp |
| ¾ | 67.5 g | 12.7 tbsp | 37.5 tsp |
| 1 | 90 g | 17 tbsp | 50 tsp |
| 1½ | 135 g | 25.5 tbsp | 75 tsp |
| 2 | 180 g | 34 tbsp | 100 tsp |
| 3 | 270 g | 50.9 tbsp | 150 tsp |
| 4 | 360 g | 67.9 tbsp | 200 tsp |
Scoville Scale: Where Cayenne Sits
Cayenne pepper (30,000–50,000 Scoville Heat Units) sits in the upper-medium range of culinary spices. The Scoville scale measures capsaicin concentration — the compound responsible for the burning sensation of chili peppers. Capsaicin activates TRPV1 receptors on the tongue and throat, triggering the same physiological response as heat injury: increased heart rate, sweating, and endorphin release. There is no actual tissue damage at culinary concentrations.
| Spice/Pepper | Scoville Heat Units | Relative Heat |
|---|---|---|
| Bell pepper | 0 | None |
| Paprika (sweet) | 100–500 | Negligible |
| Chili powder (blend) | 500–2,500 | Very mild |
| Jalapeño | 2,500–8,000 | Mild-medium |
| Chipotle | 2,500–8,000 | Mild-medium |
| Cayenne pepper | 30,000–50,000 | Hot |
| Red pepper flakes | 30,000–50,000 | Hot |
| Habanero | 100,000–350,000 | Very hot |
| Ghost pepper | 800,000–1,000,000 | Extreme |
The practical implication of cayenne's 30,000–50,000 SHU rating: a single teaspoon (1.8g) of cayenne in a dish serving 4 people delivers approximately 7,500–12,500 SHU per serving — equivalent to eating a fresh jalapeño. For reference, "medium" Mexican restaurant salsa is typically 1,000–3,000 SHU. This makes cayenne a precision ingredient that should be measured carefully, not roughly estimated.
Cayenne vs Chili Powder: Two Different Ingredients
The confusion between cayenne pepper and chili powder is one of the most common spice mistakes in American cooking. They are fundamentally different products:
Cayenne pepper: 100% ground dried cayenne chiles. Single-origin, single-ingredient. Heat: 30,000–50,000 SHU. No added spices. Used as a heat additive.
Chili powder (American blend): A proprietary blend, typically 80–85% ground ancho or pasilla chile, plus cumin (5–10%), oregano (3–5%), garlic powder (2–4%), and sometimes cayenne (2–5%). Mild blend: 500–2,500 SHU total. Used as the primary flavoring for chili con carne, tacos, and Tex-Mex cooking — it provides the characteristic color and flavor, not primarily heat.
Substitution: 1 tablespoon chili powder ≠ 1 tablespoon cayenne. Substituting cayenne for chili powder at equal volume would make your chili approximately 10–15 times hotter and would eliminate the cumin-oregano-garlic backbone of the flavor. To substitute: use ¼ teaspoon cayenne + 1 teaspoon each cumin and paprika + a pinch of garlic powder + a pinch of oregano to approximate 1 tablespoon of chili powder.
Practical Cayenne Amounts for Common Dishes
| Application | Cayenne Amount | Weight | Heat Level (4 servings) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Background warmth in soup | ⅛ tsp | 0.23g | Very mild |
| Buffalo sauce (1 cup) | 1–2 tbsp | 5.3–10.6g | Medium-hot |
| Cajun blackening spice | 1 tsp per ¼ cup blend | 1.8g | Hot |
| Deviled eggs (12) | ⅛–¼ tsp | 0.23–0.45g | Very mild |
| Spiced chocolate ganache | ¼–½ tsp | 0.45–0.9g | Warm spice |
| Chili (pot, 8 servings) | ½–1 tsp | 0.9–1.8g | Medium |
| Hot rub for grilled chicken | 1 tsp per 4 chicken pieces | 1.8g | Hot |
Buffalo sauce is one of the few applications where cayenne is used in tablespoon quantities rather than small fractions of a teaspoon. Classic Buffalo sauce: 1–2 tablespoons (5.3–10.6g) cayenne + ½ cup (113g) butter + ½ cup (120g) hot sauce (like Frank's RedHot) + 1 tablespoon vinegar. The butter fat dissolves the capsaicin, distributing it evenly and reducing its immediate sharp heat while maintaining sustained warmth. This is why Buffalo sauce tastes hot but not as sharply painful as straight cayenne at the same concentration.
Common Questions About Cayenne Pepper
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1 teaspoon of cayenne pepper weighs 1.8 grams. 1 tablespoon = 5.3 grams. 1 cup = 90 grams. At 30,000–50,000 SHU, 1 teaspoon in 4 servings creates noticeable heat. For background warmth without obvious spice, use ⅛–¼ teaspoon (0.23–0.45g) per 4-serving recipe.
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Yes — both are approximately 30,000–50,000 SHU. Use ½ teaspoon (0.9g) cayenne for every ¾ teaspoon of red pepper flakes. Ground cayenne disperses more evenly in sauces; flakes provide more visible texture and localized heat. In pasta sauces, flakes are traditional (aglio e olio, arrabbiata). In rubs and blended sauces, ground cayenne integrates more smoothly.
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Capsaicin is fat-soluble — add butter, cream, coconut milk, or olive oil to bind and dilute the heat. Add dairy (milk, yogurt, sour cream) whose casein proteins coat capsaicin molecules. Increase the dish's total volume with unseasoned base ingredients. Sugar and acid can mask perceived heat. Water, broth, and non-fat liquids will not reduce the capsaicin concentration per bite.
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No. Cayenne pepper is 100% ground dried cayenne chiles (30,000–50,000 SHU). American chili powder is a blend of mild ancho/pasilla chile, cumin, oregano, and garlic (500–2,500 SHU total). They are not interchangeable — substituting cayenne for chili powder at equal volume would make your dish 10–15 times hotter. Chili powder provides complex flavor; cayenne provides primarily heat.
- USDA FoodData Central — Spices, pepper, red or cayenne (NDB 02031)
- American Spice Trade Association — Scoville ratings
- On Food and Cooking — Harold McGee, Scribner 2004
- The Food Lab — J. Kenji López-Alt, W. W. Norton 2015