The Malagueta is a small, fiery chili pepper native to Brazil from the Capsicum frutescens species. It offers intense heat of 50,000 to 100,000 Scoville units with a bright sweet-tangy and citrusy flavor profile. It is a staple in Brazilian, Portuguese, and Caribbean cuisines for bold heat in stews, sauces, and meats.
The Malagueta pepper, scientifically Capsicum frutescens 'Malagueta', is a compact shrubby plant that produces small, thin, tapered pods about 5 cm (2 inches) long. The pods grow upright, starting green when immature and maturing to a vibrant bright red color with thin skin and thin walls containing few seeds. Heat ranges from 50,000 to 100,000 Scoville Heat Units with a typical average of 75,000 SHU, delivering a sharp, quick-building burn that fades to a pleasant warmth, similar to Thai or bird's eye chilies but with distinctive sweet, tangy, and citrusy notes. This pepper is a cornerstone of Brazilian cuisine and widely used across Portuguese-speaking regions including Portugal, Mozambique, Angola, and the Caribbean. Common preparations include fresh use, pickling in oil or vinegar with garlic as a table condiment, or incorporation into hot sauces, salsas, soups, stews, moquecas (seafood stews), poultry, fish, and meat dishes. Its name originates from the unrelated West African melegueta pepper (grains of paradise) due to similar pungency, a confusion stemming from Portuguese trade during the Columbian Exchange. The pepper was introduced from the New World to Europe and its colonies, spreading rapidly and integrating into local cuisines. The plant thrives as a perennial in tropical climates, requiring full sun, warm temperatures above 21°C, well-drained fertile soil with pH 6.2-7.0, and consistent moisture. It is highly productive with harvest in 60-90 days when pods turn red.
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The Malagueta pepper originated in the New World, particularly associated with Brazil, and was first encountered by Portuguese explorers in the Caribbean in 1492. Its name was applied due to resemblance in pungency to the unrelated West African melegueta pepper (Aframomum melegueta, grains of paradise), causing historical confusion in literature. During the Columbian Exchange, Portuguese navigators spread it to Portugal, Brazil (where it became iconic), African colonies (Mozambique, Angola as jindungo or piri-piri), and beyond to the Caribbean and Asia. It quickly integrated into local cuisines as a versatile heat source and was valued for flavor, color, and medicinal properties.
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Reach out →Bright sweet and tangy with prominent citrus notes, delivering a sharp quick heat that fades cleanly to a pleasant warmth without lingering bitterness.
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