Paprika is made from ripe red peppers that are dried and finely ground into a powder, usually from varieties of the Capsicum annuum plant such as sweet bell-type peppers and mild chili peppers.

What paprika is made of

  • Paprika comes from the dried pods (fruits) of red Capsicum annuum peppers, not from a special “paprika plant.”
  • The spice is mostly the pepper flesh; seeds and stems may be partly removed for sweeter types and more partly left in for hotter types.
  • Different varieties of these peppers give different flavors, from mild and sweet to fairly hot and smoky.

How paprika is produced

  • Peppers are harvested when fully red and glossy, then dried (air-dried, kiln-dried, or smoke-dried for smoked paprika) until they are brittle.
  • The dried peppers are then ground in mills into a uniform fine powder; removing more inner cores and seeds produces milder, sweeter paprika.

Types and variations

  • Sweet paprika uses mild, sweet peppers with most of the seeds and inner core removed, so it mainly adds color and gentle sweetness.
  • Hot paprika includes more pungent pepper varieties and often more seeds, giving noticeable heat.
  • Smoked paprika (often called pimentón) is made from peppers dried over wood smoke, commonly oak, which gives a pronounced smoky flavor.

Extra notes: nutrition and color

  • Paprika’s red to orange color comes from carotenoid pigments in the peppers, and it is also used industrially as a coloring extract (oleoresin of paprika) in processed foods.
  • It naturally contains vitamin C and carotenoids like lutein and zeaxanthin, though amounts vary with pepper type and color.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.