HotPepperIndex
Capsicum chinense

Cumari do Para

Brazil
Hot
Also known asCumari do Pará · Pimenta Cumari · Cumari
Scoville
0SHU
Heat0%
50k–300k SHU · PepperScale and multiple seed catalogs

The Cumari do Para is a rare, tiny yellow chili pepper native to Brazil's Pará state in the Amazon region. This Capsicum chinense variety produces prolific crops of pea-sized pods with fruity, citrus-like flavor and variable heat ranging from medium to extra-hot.

Hailing from the northern Brazilian state of Pará, the Cumari do Para is a wild or semi-wild Capsicum chinense pepper prized for its small size and intense yet flavorful heat. The compact, bushy plants grow to about 70 cm tall and produce an abundance of 1 cm (roughly 0.5 inch) bullet-shaped pods that ripen from green to a striking golden yellow. These pea-like fruits deliver a strong fruity aroma with sweet, tropical, and citrus notes reminiscent of habanero or Scotch bonnet peppers. Heat levels vary widely from 50,000 to 300,000 Scoville heat units, with an average around 175,000 SHU, making individual pods range from manageable to intensely hot. In Brazilian cuisine, especially in Pará, they are traditionally used fresh in hot sauces, salsas, and pickled preparations, or dried into a flavorful powder. The name derives from the indigenous Tupi-Guarani language, translating roughly to 'small yellow pepper' or evoking 'the taste of pleasure.' Closely related to other Amazonian chinense types like Aji Charapita, it is difficult to source outside its native region but grows easily in pots with high yields. Its vibrant yellow fruits stand out dramatically against the green foliage, adding both ornamental and culinary appeal.

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Backstory

Named after the Cumari region and Pará state in Brazil's Amazon rainforest, this pepper's name comes from the extinct Tupian indigenous language meaning 'small yellow pepper' or 'taste of pleasure.' It is one of the most popular 'Cumari' varieties in northern Brazil, distinct from southern praetermissum types, and remains rare outside its native habitat.

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Flavor

Strong fruity aroma with sweet, tropical notes and a distinct citrus-like flavor; delivers an immediate burst of sweetness before the heat builds.

fruitysweetcitrustropical

Culinary uses

hot saucessalsaspicklingchili powderBrazilian dishescurries

Q&A

Substitutions

HabaneroScotch bonnetAji Charapita

Related variants

Appearance

Size
up to 1 cm (0.5 inch)
Skin
smooth, thin
Color
green ripening to golden yellow
Flesh
medium thickness
Plant
bushy, sprawling, prolific
Shape
bullet-shaped or pea-like

Growing

Sun
full sun
Soil
well-drained, fertile
Notes
Easy to grow, thrives in pots, resembles wild growth habit
Water
moderate, consistent moisture
Yield
very high, prolific
Height
70 cm to 1.2 m
Container
yes, prefers larger pots
Days to maturity
80-90

Origin detail

Region
Pará
Country
Brazil

Tags

yellowsmall podsfruitycitrusbrazilianhot sauceamazonianprolific

Sources

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These references are used to verify what we publish — not as the source of the content itself. Seed catalogs, breeder pages, research papers, and cultivar databases let us cross-check every fact before it lands here. Open any card to read the original or dig deeper.

4 sources · Added May 12, 2026, 10:11 UTC
Origins
A World of Capsicum
Peppers and their homelands. Tap a marker.
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