Start · Catalogue · Profile · Table
Food BODY HANDBOOK
Food · §250
Cinnamon (Ceylon vs Cassia)
The cinnamon in your kitchen and the cinnamon a Sri Lankan family uses are two different trees, and your liver tells them apart. Most supermarket cinnamon is cassia, whose flavour compound coumarin damages the liver at chronic high doses — a heaping teaspoon a day already crosses the safe ceiling for an average adult. The Ceylon version has roughly one one-hundredth the coumarin and is nearly invisible outside specialty stores. The metabolic story you have heard — cinnamon as a blood-sugar fix — is real but small: post-meal sugar curves blunt, fasting glucose drops modestly in type-2 diabetes, and the meta-analyses converge on a small signal, not a treatment. The whole entry turns on which jar you are using, and what you think it is doing.
Know · As-needed Evidence Mixed Chapter Food

Do not let the wellness aisle sell you cinnamon as a blood-sugar cure — but do not dismiss it as nothing either. A teaspoon on the carb-heavy meal nudges the post-meal spike a notch lower; for someone with type-2 diabetes who takes it daily, it shaves a small but real fraction off fasting glucose. The honest move is cheap and one-time: read the jar, swap supermarket cassia for Ceylon, and stop counting milligrams against your liver. Nothing transforms overnight; the worst version of the leak just quietly stops.

What cinnamon actually does, in plain terms: it slows down the sugar spike that follows a carb-heavy meal, and — in people who already have type-2 diabetes or are sliding toward it — gently lowers the baseline sugar level over weeks. The compound doing most of the work is cinnamaldehyde, the molecule that gives cinnamon its smell. It slows the stomach's emptying, hands the body's insulin a small boost, and dulls the gut enzymes that break starch into sugar Hlebowicz 2007, Jarvill-Taylor 2001. None of this is a cure for anything. The effect is real, the size is small, and the field has spent twenty years failing to find a bigger one.

The original trial that opened the field was striking: sixty patients with type-2 diabetes in Pakistan saw fasting glucose drop almost a quarter on cassia at one to six grams a day Khan 2003. Nobody has replicated those numbers since; every meta-analysis has shrunk the effect Allen 2013, Akilen 2012. For a healthy adult who adds a teaspoon to oatmeal, the felt change is essentially nothing. For someone with poorly controlled diabetes taking it daily for months, the next labs come back a hair better — alongside whatever is doing the actual work.

The jar in your cupboard is probably not what you think

"Cinnamon" is not one plant. Almost everything sold as ground cinnamon in a North American supermarket is cassia — the bark of three closely related trees grown in China, Indonesia, and Vietnam. The variety the spice is named for, Ceylon cinnamon (Cinnamomum verum, sometimes called "true cinnamon"), grows almost exclusively in Sri Lanka and is sold mostly through specialty stores. They taste different. Cassia is hot and bold; Ceylon is delicate and citrusy. Most Western baking palates expect the cassia version, which is part of why almost nobody outside Germany and Scandinavia has been told the distinction exists.

The reason it matters is one molecule. Cassia bark contains a flavour compound called coumarin at two to ten milligrams per gram of bark — occasionally above twelve in Indonesian batches Wang 2013. Ceylon bark contains it at roughly one one-hundredth that level. Coumarin damages the liver at chronic high doses. The supermarket jar is not poison — but if you use cinnamon heavily, the variety quietly matters.

The cassia ceiling

European food-safety regulators set the safe upper limit for coumarin at 0.1 milligrams per kilogram of body weight per day, for life-long exposure EFSA 2008. For a 70 kg adult, that is about seven milligrams a day. A heaping teaspoon of cassia weighs roughly 2.6 grams and delivers ten to twenty-five milligrams of coumarin at typical concentrations — already over the ceiling for most adults BfR 2012.

The German Federal Institute for Risk Assessment first sounded the alarm in 2006, when children eating Zimtsterne — cinnamon star cookies — through the Christmas season were ending up over the ceiling on body-weight math alone BfR 2012. The pattern at risk is heavy daily cassia use over months. A pinch in last weekend's apple crumble does nothing.

Two drug interactions matter at heavy daily use. Cinnamon can amplify the glucose-lowering effect of diabetes medication — if you are on metformin, a sulfonylurea, or insulin, daily multi-gram cinnamon becomes a real input to your numbers and your doctor should know. And coumarin sits in the same molecular family as warfarin, the blood thinner; heavy cinnamon while on a blood thinner warrants a conversation, not a quiet experiment.

If you are using it for the glucose effect

The honest framing first: cinnamon is not the plan. It is the spice on the meal you were going to eat anyway, with a small metabolic bonus. But if you want the bonus to actually be present rather than theoretical, the trial doses give a floor worth knowing.

Doses above three grams a day do not appear to do more for fasting glucose; the dose-response saturates. Water-extract supplements (sold under names like Cinnulin) deliver the polyphenols without the coumarin, which is useful if the cassia math does not work for you and Ceylon is hard to get.

How to tell the two varieties apart

Sticks are easy. Ceylon sticks are many thin, papery layers rolled tight, the way a cigar is rolled — snap one with your fingers and it crumbles. Cassia sticks are a single thick curl of harder bark; you need a knife to break one.

Ground cinnamon is visually identical. The label is the only signal: a jar that says Ceylon cinnamon, or names Cinnamomum verum or Cinnamomum zeylanicum in the ingredients, is the real thing. A jar that just says "cinnamon" — including most of the bigger supermarket-brand ones — is almost certainly cassia. Ceylon runs two to four times the per-gram cost of cassia and is still trivial in absolute terms: a year of household supply lands between ten and twenty-five dollars at a good ethnic grocery or an online spice merchant. The flavour will surprise anyone raised on cassia — lighter, brighter, less hot. Some baking recipes were written around cassia's bolder note and will taste under-spiced if you swap one-for-one; nudge the quantity up.

What the reader actually gets

For most people, this is a small, quiet swap with no felt difference. Cinnamon stops being a thing the supplement aisle is selling at you. The jar in the cupboard becomes one the household can use heavily without anyone keeping milligram tallies in the background. The teaspoon on the breakfast you already eat does a slightly gentler thing to your mid-morning energy curve than the same breakfast without it; you probably will not feel that, but the lab work in five years will not fight you about it either.

For a smaller group — pre-diabetic, early type-2, watching the numbers — daily Ceylon does a small but measurable thing to fasting glucose: the same order of magnitude as losing five to seven pounds Allen 2013. It is not the intervention; it is one of the small things that compound alongside the actual intervention. Readers who treat it as the plan end up disappointed; readers who treat it as the spice they already cook with, plus one informed jar swap, get a quiet upgrade for almost no effort.

Adjacent topics worth knowing

Real glucose control runs through carbohydrate quality, walks after meals, and sleep — cinnamon is at most the margin. The bigger levers in that neighbourhood: post-meal movement, fibre intake, and (for someone curious about their own pattern) a short stint with a continuous glucose monitor. For the broader category of culinary spices with metabolic claims — turmeric, ginger, fenugreek — the shape of the story is similar: small honest signals, much louder marketing.

·
250