Gochugaru — Cups to Grams

1 cup gochugaru = 88g — 1 tablespoon = 5.5g — 1 teaspoon = 1.8g

Variant
Result
88grams

1 cup Gochugaru = 88 grams

Tablespoons16
Teaspoons48.9
Ounces3.1

Quick Conversion Table — Gochugaru

CupsGramsTablespoonsTeaspoons
¼22 g4 tbsp12.2 tsp
29.3 g5.33 tbsp16.3 tsp
½44 g8 tbsp24.4 tsp
58.7 g10.7 tbsp32.6 tsp
¾66 g12 tbsp36.7 tsp
188 g16 tbsp48.9 tsp
132 g24 tbsp73.3 tsp
2176 g32 tbsp97.8 tsp
3264 g48 tbsp146.7 tsp
4352 g64 tbsp195.6 tsp

Gochugaru Weights and Measures

Gochugaru's large, irregular flake size means it measures very differently from fine chili powder. The same measuring cup filled with gochugaru contains roughly 20–25% less mass than if filled with fine cayenne powder. Always measure gochugaru by weight for large-batch kimchi making.

MeasureCoarse gochugaru (g)Fine gochugaru powder (g)
1 teaspoon1.8g2.3g
1 tablespoon5.5g6.9g
¼ cup22g27.5g
½ cup44g55g
1 cup88g110g
500g bag5.7 cups4.5 cups
Coarse vs fine gochugaru: Coarse gochugaru is the standard for kimchi — its texture creates the characteristic paste coating on cabbage. Fine gochugaru (powder) is used in soups, stews, and sauces where a smooth consistency is needed. They are not interchangeable by volume — use approximately 20% less fine powder when substituting for coarse flakes to avoid over-seasoning.

What Is Gochugaru: The Korean Chili

Gochugaru (고추가루) is made from Korean Capsicum annuum varieties — most commonly the "Cheongyang" (hot) or standard Korean red pepper cultivars — that are sun-dried whole, then stone-ground or mechanically ground to a coarse flake consistency. The sun-drying process (which takes 2–3 weeks in traditional production) concentrates the fruity sweetness and red carotenoid pigments while mellowing the raw green-pepper sharpness.

Quality grades of gochugaru range from premium (sun-dried, traditional stone-ground, vivid red) to commercial (quick-dried, mechanically processed, darker red-brown). Premium gochugaru is slightly oily to the touch — the residual natural chili oils have not been driven off by aggressive heat-drying. The oiliness improves kimchi paste adhesion and depth of flavor.

Unlike dried chili flakes from other traditions, gochugaru is not typically roasted or smoked — the flavor is bright, fresh-fruity, and clean. The seeds are partially included in standard gochugaru, contributing mild heat; seed-free varieties (for a sweeter flavor) are also commercially available. Korean chili growing is concentrated in North Chungcheong Province (Cheongyang county) and South Gyeongsang Province, where specific microclimate conditions (hot, humid summers followed by dry autumn) produce optimal drying conditions.

Gochugaru in Korean Cooking

Baechu kimchi (standard napa cabbage kimchi, 1 large head): 1 large napa cabbage (1–1.5 kg), salted with 1/4 cup coarse sea salt, brined 4–6 hours, rinsed and squeezed. Paste: 1/2–1 cup (44–88g) gochugaru + 4 tablespoons fish sauce + 1 tablespoon sugar + 1 tablespoon grated ginger + 6 cloves garlic minced + 4 green onions. Massage paste into cabbage leaf by leaf. Ferment in sealed jar at room temperature 24–48 hours, then refrigerate. Flavor deepens for 2–4 weeks.

Tteokbokki sauce (2 servings): 2 tablespoons (11g) gochugaru + 2 tablespoons (30g) gochujang + 2 tablespoons soy sauce + 1 tablespoon sugar + 2 cups (480ml) anchovy-kelp dashi. Simmer until sauce thickens and coats rice cakes (300g tteok). The gochugaru adds color and texture contrast to gochujang's smooth base.

Bibimbap sauce (2 servings): 2 tablespoons (30g) gochujang + 1 teaspoon (1.8g) gochugaru + 1 tablespoon sesame oil + 1 tablespoon rice vinegar + 1 teaspoon sugar + 1 teaspoon sesame seeds. The gochugaru adds visual red speckle and textural pop to the smooth gochujang base.

Doenjang jjigae (2 servings): 1 tablespoon (5.5g) gochugaru added alongside doenjang for color and gentle heat without gochujang's sweetness.

Color Chemistry and Quality Assessment

The bright red color of gochugaru is produced by capsanthin and capsorubin — fat-soluble carotenoid pigments that are unique to red peppers. These pigments are measured as ASTA (American Spice Trade Association) color units: premium gochugaru achieves 100–130 ASTA units, while low-quality or aged product drops to 50–70 ASTA. The vivid red color is directly related to fresh flavor quality — visually dull, brownish-orange gochugaru has lost both color and aromatic compounds.

Per 100g gochugaru: approximately 282 calories, 14g protein, 12g fat, 50g carbohydrate, 27g fiber, 7,000–8,000IU vitamin A (as carotenoids), 76mg vitamin C. As a spice used in small quantities (5–20g per dish), nutritional contribution is limited — the primary value is culinary rather than nutritional. The capsaicin content (approximately 30–60mg per 100g for standard gochugaru) is significantly lower than cayenne (600–1,000mg per 100g), consistent with gochugaru's milder heat profile.