Sumatra-Kerinci (West Sumatra / Jambi highlands), Indonesia

Korintje cinnamon

3.5%

essential oil yield

of dry bark

75%

US cinnamon market

Korintje dominates supermarket shelves

Mount Kerinci

Sumatran origin

1500–1800 m volcanic slopes

6 years

tree to first harvest

then 10–15 more of strip cycles

Profile

Korintje cinnamon is the dried inner bark of Cinnamomum burmannii, an evergreen laurel native to the highlands of western Sumatra, sold almost universally in the United States as simply "cinnamon." The name comes from the Kerinci Valley -- rendered Korintje by Dutch colonial traders -- a high caldera lake region straddling West Sumatra and Jambi provinces where the species grows wild and has been cultivated for export since at least the seventeenth century. The bark carries cinnamaldehyde at 2 to 4 percent, lower than Saigon cassia but with a sweeter, less aggressive profile that bakers prefer. The grading system is uniquely Indonesian: Type A (also called AA or KA) denotes the thinnest, most tightly rolled quills with the highest volatile-oil content; Type B and C are progressively thicker and woodier. Korintje dominates about 70 percent of the US cinnamon market by volume, though most consumers never learn its name. The coumarin content is the persistent controversy: Cinnamomum burmannii contains 0.3 to 1.2 percent coumarin by dry weight, far above the European tolerable daily intake of 0.1 milligrams per kilogram body weight, which has led Germany and the EU to impose import limits that do not apply in the US.

Origin

Sumatra-Kerinci (West Sumatra / Jambi highlands), Indonesia.

Indonesia

Sumatra-Kerinci (West Sumatra / Jambi highlands) · Mount Kerinci, Jambi (Indonesia)

Process

01Year 1–6

Tree reaches maturity

Cinnamomum burmannii planted on volcanic slopes above Kerinci lake, reaching 6–10 m before the first bark strip.

02Rainy season

Bark separates easily

Peak humidity under 90% lets workers score and peel strips cleanly — dry-season bark cracks and splits.

03Two-cut harvest

Knife along the trunk

A curved blade runs two parallel cuts, the inner bark pried off in long sheets 2 m long by 5 cm wide.

04Drying

Bark curls into quills

Strips dry on bamboo racks for 4–6 days; each sheet curls tightly on itself into the single thick quill that defines Korintje.

05Grading

A, B, C by oil content

Grade A is highest oil (3.5%+) and reddest colour, grade C is younger branch bark with less oil — most US cinnamon is grade B korintje.

06Your jar

Sticks or pre-ground

Whole quills keep aroma 2+ years; pre-ground loses volatile cinnamaldehyde in 6 months. Grind what you use that week.

Inside the berry

The molecules that make it taste like Kampot — and not like anything else.

GC-MS of Cinnamomum burmannii Korintje bark oil: cinnamaldehyde sits at 60–75% of the volatile fraction, the highest among the commercial cassias except for Saigon. The ratio of cinnamaldehyde to eugenol and coumarin defines the country that will buy it.

3.5%

Essential oil

of dry bark

70%

Cinnamaldehyde

of bark oil

2000 ppm

Coumarin

regulatory ceiling concern

80+

Volatile compounds

identified

Volatile compound profile

  • Cinnamaldehyde70.0%

    Warm, spicy-sweet — the cinnamon core.

  • Cinnamyl acetate8.0%

    Floral-fruity — softens the edge.

  • Eugenol5.0%

    Clove-like — warmth and depth.

  • Linalool3.0%

    Floral-citrus — brightness.

  • Coumarin0.4%

    Hay-vanilla — the regulatory flag.

  • Beta-caryophyllene2.0%

    Woody-peppery — backbone.

Versus other peppers

PepperCinnamaldehydeOil
Korintje (Sumatra)
Kerinci · US benchmark, sweet-warm balance
3.5%Sweet
Saigon
Vietnam · higher cinnamaldehyde (~80%), premium cassia
5.0%Sharp
China cassia
Guangxi · rougher, high coumarin, pharmacy tradition
2.5%Harsh
Ceylon
Sri Lanka · true cinnamon, lower cinnamaldehyde (55%), low coumarin
1.5%Delicate
Madagascar cinnamon
Cinnamomum zeylanicum · sweeter, more eugenol
2.5%Floral

Cuisines

How the world cooks with it.

3 signature dishes

Korintje is the silent star of the American supermarket spice aisle — behind every cinnamon roll, pumpkin pie, snickerdoodle and apple-pie recipe since the early 20th century.

  • Cinnamon rollgrade: korintje-cinnamon

    Enriched dough, 3% sugar-cinnamon fill, cream-cheese frosting.

  • Apple piegrade: korintje-cinnamon

    Granny Smith, sugar, butter, one teaspoon of ground korintje.

  • Snickerdoodlegrade: korintje-cinnamon

    Soft sugar cookie rolled in cinnamon-sugar before baking.

Around the world

What it's called, from Phnom Penh to Palermo.

10 languages
🇸🇦 Arabicar

قرفة كورينتجي

qirfa kurintji

🇨🇳 Chinesezh

印尼肉桂

yinni rougui

🇬🇧 Englishen

Korintje cinnamon

🇫🇷 Frenchfr

Cannelle de Korintje

🇩🇪 Germande

Korintje-Zimt

🇮🇳 Hindihi

कोरिंटजे दालचीनी

korintje dalchini

🇮🇹 Italianit

Cannella di Korintje

🇯🇵 Japaneseja

コリンチェシナモン

korinche shinamon

🇵🇹 Portuguesept

Canela de Korintje

🇪🇸 Spanishes

Canela de Korintje

Seasonality

Jan
Feb
Mar
Apr
May
Jun
Jul
Aug
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec
Peak rainy-season harvestBark strip cyclesStored, available

Pairings

Protein

  • Moroccan lamb tagine

Plant

  • Sweet potato bake

Sweet

  • Apple pie

Story

Frequent questions

In the United States, yes — around 75% of the 'cinnamon' sold in American supermarkets is Korintje cassia (Cinnamomum burmannii) from Sumatra. The FDA does not distinguish cassia from true cinnamon, so it can all be labelled 'cinnamon' regardless of species.