Diced Bell Pepper — Cups to Grams
1 cup diced bell pepper = 149 grams (sliced: 92g/cup, fine chopped: 130g/cup)
1 cup Bell Pepper = 149 grams
Quick Conversion Table — Bell Pepper
| Cups | Grams | Tablespoons | Teaspoons |
|---|---|---|---|
| ¼ | 37.3 g | 4.01 tbsp | 12 tsp |
| ⅓ | 49.7 g | 5.34 tbsp | 16 tsp |
| ½ | 74.5 g | 8.01 tbsp | 24 tsp |
| ⅔ | 99.3 g | 10.7 tbsp | 32 tsp |
| ¾ | 111.8 g | 12 tbsp | 36.1 tsp |
| 1 | 149 g | 16 tbsp | 48.1 tsp |
| 1½ | 223.5 g | 24 tbsp | 72.1 tsp |
| 2 | 298 g | 32 tbsp | 96.1 tsp |
| 3 | 447 g | 48.1 tbsp | 144.2 tsp |
| 4 | 596 g | 64.1 tbsp | 192.3 tsp |
Red vs Green vs Yellow vs Orange: One Fruit, Four Stages
All four common bell pepper colors are the same species — Capsicum annuum — and the same cultivars ripening through different stages. Green bell peppers are unripe, harvested before the fruit has completed its maturation process. Red, yellow, and orange bell peppers are the same peppers allowed to ripen on the plant, with the color change resulting from the development of different carotenoid pigments.
Green bell peppers are harvested before full ripeness, which is why they are generally less expensive (shorter growing time, higher yield per plant, no waiting for full ripening). Their flavor is more bitter, vegetal, and slightly astringent compared to ripe peppers. The bitterness comes from certain alkaloids and chlorophyll that break down or convert to sugars during ripening. Green peppers are the traditional choice in Cajun cooking (as one of the "Holy Trinity" of onion, celery, and green pepper) precisely for this savory bitterness, which provides depth in long-cooked dishes.
Red bell peppers are fully ripe and have the highest sugar content (about 6g/100g vs 2.4g for green) and the highest vitamin C content of all bell pepper colors — surprisingly, red bell peppers contain approximately twice the vitamin C of oranges per gram. They also contain lycopene, the same antioxidant in tomatoes. Their sweetness makes them the best choice for raw preparations (crudités, stuffed peppers, salads).
Yellow and orange bell peppers represent intermediate ripeness stages with flavor profiles between green and red — sweeter than green, slightly less rich than red. Yellow peppers contain lutein and zeaxanthin (carotenoids important for eye health). Orange peppers contain alpha-carotene and beta-carotene.
Why Cut Style Changes Cup Weight So Dramatically
The difference between 149g/cup (diced) and 92g/cup (sliced) for the same bell pepper is one of the largest cut-style weight variations among common vegetables. Understanding why helps prevent measurement errors.
When a bell pepper is diced into small cubes (approximately 1–1.5cm pieces), those cubes pack efficiently in a cup — they stack and orient randomly, filling air gaps by fitting together. The result is a dense cup with relatively little wasted space. When a bell pepper is sliced into long strips, the strips orient parallel to each other and to the sides of the cup, but their curved shape (bell peppers have a convex cross-section) means strips never nest perfectly. The curved strips leave substantial air gaps between them. A cup of strips therefore contains fewer grams of pepper despite appearing full.
This explains why a recipe calling for "2 bell peppers, sliced" (approximately 184–246g of strips) describes a very different quantity than "2 bell peppers, diced" (approximately 298–372g of diced pepper), despite both starting from the same number of peppers.
| Cut Style | g/cup | 1 large pepper yields | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|
| Diced (1–1.5cm) | 149g | ≈1.25 cups (186g) | Salsa, fried rice, stuffing |
| Finely chopped (0.5cm) | 130g | ≈1.4 cups (182g) | Soffritto, sauces, omelets |
| Sliced strips | 92g | ≈2 cups (184g) | Fajitas, stir-fry, roasting |
Bell Pepper in Key Recipes: Quantities
Fajitas (4 servings): The classic fajita uses sliced peppers — thin strips, approximately 5–7mm wide and 7–10cm long. Two to three large peppers (300–450g whole, trimmed) yield approximately 2.5–3 cups (230–276g) of sliced strips after cutting. A colorful fajita platter uses one of each: one green + one red + one yellow, providing visual variety and a range of flavors from savory-bitter (green) to sweet (red). The peppers are stir-fried in a very hot, dry (or lightly oiled) cast-iron pan until charred at the edges but still slightly firm — 4–5 minutes total over maximum heat.
Stir-fry (4 servings): 1.5–2 cups (138–184g) of sliced bell pepper, added in the last 2–3 minutes of cooking time. Bell pepper is more delicate than broccoli, snap peas, or carrots in a stir-fry and should go in later than denser vegetables. It retains color and slight crunch when added at the correct stage. Adding it too early (with the protein) produces limp, pallid strips.
Stuffed bell peppers (6 servings): 6 large bell peppers (whole), each hollowed out by cutting off the top and removing seeds and ribs. Each pepper holds approximately 1–1.5 cups (149–224g) of filling (ground meat + rice + sauce). Red or orange peppers are traditional for stuffed applications because their sweetness complements savory meat fillings; green peppers' bitterness can compete with the filling.
The Cajun Holy Trinity: Creole and Cajun cooking's equivalent of the French mirepoix — onion, celery, and green bell pepper — typically in a 2:1:1 ratio by volume. For a 4-serving gumbo, dirty rice, or étouffée: 1 cup diced onion (160g) + ½ cup diced celery (51g) + ½ cup diced green bell pepper (75g). The green pepper's savory bitterness is a specific flavor contribution in this application — don't substitute red.
Fresh vs Frozen Bell Pepper
Frozen bell pepper strips are available in most supermarket freezer sections and offer convenience at the cost of texture. The freezing process ruptures cell walls, releasing intracellular water when thawed and making the pepper significantly softer than fresh. Frozen peppers are appropriate for all cooked applications and inappropriate for any raw application.
From a quantity standpoint, frozen strips weigh approximately 120–130g per cup (measured frozen, with ice crystals filling gaps). One 10-oz (283g) bag of frozen bell pepper strips yields approximately 2–2.5 cups measured frozen, which is roughly equivalent to 2 medium fresh bell peppers' worth of pepper strips (approximately 300g). The cost comparison typically favors frozen for off-season purchase of red, yellow, and orange peppers.
Bell Pepper Conversion Table
| Amount | Diced (g) | Sliced (g) | Fine chopped (g) | Oz (diced) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 tsp | 3.1g | 1.9g | 2.7g | 0.11 oz |
| 1 tbsp | 9.3g | 5.75g | 8.1g | 0.33 oz |
| ¼ cup | 37g | 23g | 33g | 1.32 oz |
| ⅓ cup | 50g | 31g | 43g | 1.75 oz |
| ½ cup | 75g | 46g | 65g | 2.64 oz |
| ⅔ cup | 99g | 61g | 87g | 3.50 oz |
| ¾ cup | 112g | 69g | 98g | 3.95 oz |
| 1 cup | 149g | 92g | 130g | 5.26 oz |
| 1 large pepper (diced) | ≈186g (1.25 cups) | — | — | ≈6.6 oz |
| 1 medium pepper (diced) | ≈149g (1 cup) | — | — | ≈5.3 oz |
Common Questions About Bell Pepper
-
149g per cup diced. Sliced: 92g per cup (strips pack much less densely). Finely chopped: 130g per cup. 1 tablespoon diced = 9.3g. All colors weigh the same per cup — they are the same fruit at different ripeness stages.
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Approximately 1.5 to 2 large bell peppers yield 2 cups diced (298g). 1 large pepper yields about 1.25 cups diced; 1 medium pepper yields about 1 cup. For 2 exact cups, use 2 medium peppers or 1.5 large ones and measure after dicing.
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Yes. Cooking reduces bell pepper weight by approximately 20–30% as water evaporates. 1 cup (149g) of diced fresh bell pepper becomes approximately 100–120g when sautéed. Volume also reduces — 1 cup raw diced becomes approximately ¾ cup cooked. For dishes where cooked bell pepper is a garnish, account for this reduction when planning quantities.
Related Cooking Converters
- USDA FoodData Central — Peppers, sweet, green, raw (FDC ID 170108)
- USDA FoodData Central — Peppers, sweet, red, raw (FDC ID 170109)
- King Arthur Baking — Ingredient Weight Chart
- Harold McGee, On Food and Cooking — Scribner, 2004
- Paul Prudhomme, Chef Paul Prudhomme's Louisiana Kitchen — William Morrow, 1984