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I was looking to substitute chilli for some non capsaicin containing spices.

The best items I can up with was paprika, cumin, black pepper, ancho chillies and oregano.

Initially I tried black pepper and realised it loses its tang when cooking and so it must be used at the end as a raw ingredient which is not what I want.

What other items in this list would lose their spice potency like black pepper when cooked. I’m trying to remove those items so I can use one for cooking as would be the case with chilli.

Cascabel
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James Wilson
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  • What are you making? Link to a recipe would be ideal, but at least a description of the dish, cooking times, and methods would help a lot 2) Are you avoiding capsaicin because of an allergy or you just don't want the dish too hot? 3) What do you mean by "tang"?
  • – FuzzyChef Oct 31 '19 at 23:38
  • As bob1 has pointed out -- two of those will have capsaicin. And as for 'tang', I generally go with sour things. (sumac, tamarind, a splash of vinegar, etc.) – Joe Oct 31 '19 at 23:45
  • Lose is spelled l-o-s-e. Chili is spelled C-h-i-l-i. – Rob Nov 01 '19 at 11:45
  • Paprika and Ancho contain capsacin, just not very much – Lee Daniel Crocker Nov 01 '19 at 18:40
  • @Rob UK and US English are equally acceptable. If you edit, leave the author's choice intact. – Cascabel Nov 03 '19 at 03:54
  • My experience with black pepper is the opposite. I usually add it toward the end because I have accidentally added too much black pepper in the past, resulting in overspiced dishes as the pepper infuses during cooking. Then again, I sometimes use a lot of pepper. It's true that black pepper will lose its complexity of flavor during cooking, which is another reason I typically add it toward the end. But on multiple occasions I've accidentally produced dishes that were almost too "peppery" to eat by adding too much pepper at the outset. – Athanasius Nov 03 '19 at 14:35