Sriracha — Cups to Grams

1 cup sriracha = 262 grams | ~2,200 SHU | Thick chili-vinegar-garlic paste

Result
262grams

1 cup Sriracha = 262 grams

Tablespoons16
Teaspoons47.6
Ounces9.24

Quick Conversion Table — Sriracha

CupsGramsTablespoonsTeaspoons
¼65.5 g3.99 tbsp11.9 tsp
87.3 g5.32 tbsp15.9 tsp
½131 g7.99 tbsp23.8 tsp
174.7 g10.7 tbsp31.8 tsp
¾196.5 g12 tbsp35.7 tsp
1262 g16 tbsp47.6 tsp
393 g24 tbsp71.5 tsp
2524 g32 tbsp95.3 tsp
3786 g47.9 tbsp142.9 tsp
41,048 g63.9 tbsp190.5 tsp

The Density of Sriracha: What Makes It Heavy

Sriracha sits at 262g per cup — 10.5% heavier than water. This comes from its composition as a ground chili paste rather than a simple liquid hot sauce. Where Tabasco is essentially chili-infused vinegar (a liquid close to water density), sriracha is a thick, textured paste containing:

The ground chili paste content (compared to Tabasco's filtered liquid) is why sriracha is meaningfully denser — you are measuring and weighing suspended solid particles, not just liquid.

Scoville Heat: Understanding 2,200 SHU

Sriracha's approximately 2,200 SHU (Scoville Heat Units) puts it in a useful middle position on the heat scale — hot enough to register clearly, mild enough for broad applications.

Hot Sauce / ChiliScoville RangeComparison to Sriracha
Bell peppers0 SHUNo heat
Thai sriracha (Si Racha)1,000–1,800 SHUMilder
Huy Fong sriracha~2,200 SHUBaseline
Jalapeño (raw)2,500–8,000 SHUHotter
Tabasco Original2,500–5,000 SHUHotter
Sambal oelek2,000–4,000 SHUSimilar to slightly hotter
Cayenne powder30,000–50,000 SHU14–23× hotter
Habanero100,000–350,000 SHU45–159× hotter

The Scoville scale measures perceived capsaicin concentration. Sriracha's 2,200 SHU means most adults experience noticeable but comfortable heat. However, individual capsaicin sensitivity varies enormously — genetic variants in the TRPV1 receptor affect perceived heat by up to 4×. What reads as "mild" to one person may be "intensely hot" to another at identical concentrations.

Practical heat calibration: If a recipe calls for "a dash of sriracha" for gentle heat (under 1,000 SHU effective), use ½ teaspoon (2.75g). For "medium heat" (2,000–4,000 SHU effective), use 1–2 teaspoons (5.5–11g). For aggressive heat, sriracha alone is limited — combine with sambal oelek or cayenne for higher SHU results.

Sriracha Mayo and Aioli: Blending Ratios

Sriracha mayo has become a staple condiment in burgers, sushi rolls, poke bowls, and as a dipping sauce. The blending ratio determines both heat level and color intensity (more sriracha = deeper orange-red).

Ratio (Sriracha:Mayo)Sriracha per ¼ cup mayoWeight (total)Heat Level
1:8 (mild)1.5 tsp (8.25g)~64gPerceptible warmth, pink-orange tint
1:4 (medium)1 tbsp (16.4g)~72gNoticeable heat, orange-red color
1:2 (hot)2 tbsp (32.8g)~88gProminent heat, deep orange-red
1:1 (very hot)¼ cup (65.5g)~123gDominant sriracha flavor, thinned texture

Note that mayonnaise (approximately 215g/cup — dense due to oil emulsion) dramatically dilutes both the heat and the flavor of sriracha. The fat in mayo also reduces perceived heat — capsaicin is fat-soluble, so it disperses throughout the fat phase rather than concentrating on palate receptors. This is why sriracha mayo tastes milder than the same amount of sriracha eaten straight.

Flavor upgrade: Add 1 teaspoon lime juice and ½ teaspoon garlic powder to standard sriracha mayo. The lime brightens the flavor while the garlic adds depth that bridges the Huy Fong garlic flavor into the mayo base. This creates a more restaurant-quality result than plain sriracha + mayo.

Huy Fong vs Thai Sriracha: The Origin Story

The story of sriracha in the US is inseparable from David Tran, a Vietnamese-Chinese immigrant who fled Vietnam in 1978 aboard a Taiwanese freighter named Huey Fong (鴻福, meaning "vast prosperity"). He began making chili sauce in Los Angeles in 1980, and Huy Fong Foods now produces approximately 20 million bottles per year.

The sauce is named after Si Racha (also spelled Sriracha), a coastal town in Chonburi province, Thailand, where a similar chili sauce has been produced since the 1930s. Thai sriracha brands (Shark, Tra Chang, Healthy Boy) predate Huy Fong's version and differ significantly:

In Thailand, the Huy Fong product is recognized as a distinct product from Thai sriracha — Thai restaurant-goers would not confuse them. In the US, "sriracha" almost universally refers to Huy Fong's Rooster Sauce due to its market dominance.

Common Questions About Sriracha