Merguez Sausage — Cups to Grams

1 cup sliced merguez = 135g — crumbled cooked = 155g, whole link ~75g each

Variant
Result
135grams

1 cup Merguez Sausage = 135 grams

Tablespoons16.1
Teaspoons48.2
Ounces4.76

Quick Conversion Table — Merguez Sausage

CupsGramsTablespoonsTeaspoons
¼33.8 g4.02 tbsp12.1 tsp
45 g5.36 tbsp16.1 tsp
½67.5 g8.04 tbsp24.1 tsp
90 g10.7 tbsp32.1 tsp
¾101.3 g12.1 tbsp36.2 tsp
1135 g16.1 tbsp48.2 tsp
202.5 g24.1 tbsp72.3 tsp
2270 g32.1 tbsp96.4 tsp
3405 g48.2 tbsp144.6 tsp
4540 g64.3 tbsp192.9 tsp

Measuring Merguez: Sliced, Crumbled, and Whole Links

Merguez is almost always purchased and portioned by link count or weight rather than by volume in North African and French cooking. However, when recipes call for crumbled merguez in eggs, couscous, or grain dishes, cup measurements become useful for scaling.

Sliced rounds raw (135g/cup): Cut raw merguez into 1.5cm coins. The slices stack somewhat efficiently in a cup but leave moderate air gaps. This form is used for pan-frying as a topping for couscous, flatbreads, or mixed into braises.

Crumbled cooked (155g/cup): Remove casings from raw merguez and crumble the meat into a hot pan. As it cooks, the fat renders and the pieces brown into an irregular crumble. Cooked crumbles pack more densely than raw slices — the structure collapses and the pieces settle tightly. This is the form most useful in shakshuka, eggs, and stuffed pastries.

Whole links (approx. 75g each): The standard commercial link. Links placed in a cup fit 1–2 per cup depending on curvature. This measure is rarely used practically — buy by count.

MeasureSliced raw (g)Crumbled cooked (g)Links (approx.)
1 tablespoon8.4g9.7g
¼ cup33.75g38.75g
½ cup67.5g77.5g~1 link
1 cup135g155g~1.8 links
4 links (300g raw)~2.2 cups sliced~1.4 cups cooked (220g)4
Shrinkage calculation: Merguez loses approximately 25–30% of its raw weight during cooking due to fat and moisture loss. 4 raw links at 300g will yield approximately 210–225g cooked — important for recipe planning. When a recipe calls for cooked merguez by weight, purchase 30–35% more raw to account for this loss.

The Harissa Spice Complex: What Makes Merguez Red

Merguez's unmistakable deep red color and complex spice character derive primarily from harissa — the North African chili paste that is built into the sausage filling rather than served on the side. Understanding harissa composition helps when making merguez at home or when selecting commercially produced links.

Traditional harissa is made from rehydrated dried chilies (often a blend of Baklouti peppers from Tunisia, with their moderate heat and fruity depth, combined with hotter local varieties) ground with garlic, cumin, caraway, coriander, and olive oil into a smooth paste. The paste's red color is intense — even a small amount turns the meat mixture a vibrant red throughout. This color is entirely natural: the carotenoid pigments in the chilies and paprika (capsanthin, capsorubin, beta-carotene) are heat-stable and maintain their color through cooking.

Beyond harissa, good merguez typically contains sweet paprika (for additional color and mild sweetness), smoked paprika (optional, for depth), cumin (the dominant warm spice note), fennel seed (adds anise warmth), and sumac (provides tartness that brightens the rich meat). The combined effect is sausage with warm, complex heat that builds gradually rather than punching immediately — quite different from the sharper burn of fresh-chili sausages.

Classic Merguez Dishes and Quantities

Merguez appears in a range of contexts from casual street food to elaborate North African celebration feasts. Each application uses different quantities and preparation methods.

Merguez-frites (classic French street food, 1 serving): 3 whole grilled merguez links (225g raw, approximately 165g cooked) served in a split baguette with harissa sauce, mustard, and crispy frites. The baguette absorbs the fat from the sausage — the bread is integral to the dish, not optional. This is the canonical French fast-food preparation.

Shakshuka au merguez (4 servings): Crumble and brown 2 links (150g raw) merguez in a 30cm oven-safe pan over medium-high heat for 8 minutes. Add 1 can (400g) crushed tomatoes + 1 roasted red pepper + 2 teaspoons harissa + 1 teaspoon cumin. Simmer 10 minutes. Create 4 wells, crack in 4 eggs. Bake at 180°C (356°F) for 8–10 minutes until whites are set. Garnish with fresh cilantro and feta.

Couscous royal (8 servings): The celebratory version uses merguez alongside lamb chops and chicken. 8 merguez links (600g) grilled separately and served with 800g semolina couscous + lamb-vegetable broth + harissa on the side. The term "royal" indicates the use of multiple meats, with merguez being the essential element.

Nutritional Profile and Food Safety

Merguez is a high-fat, high-sodium fresh sausage. Per 100g raw: approximately 280 calories, 18g protein, 23g fat (9g saturated), 1g carbohydrate, 750–900mg sodium (varies by producer). Per 1 whole link (75g raw): approximately 210 calories, 13.5g protein. The significant fat content is why merguez cooks so well over high heat — the rendering fat bastes the meat from within.

Food safety for fresh merguez: like all fresh (uncooked) sausages, merguez must be cooked to a minimum internal temperature of 71°C (160°F). It should not be eaten pink or rare despite the red exterior color from spices. Fresh links keep in the refrigerator for 2–3 days; freeze raw for up to 2 months (beyond this the fat begins to oxidize and the spice notes deteriorate). Cook from frozen by baking at 180°C (356°F) for 25–30 minutes rather than grilling, which can char the exterior before the center cooks through.