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Vanilla Extract

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Introduction

Discover the art of crafting homemade Vanilla Extract, a flavor-packed ingredient that elevates your culinary creations. This guide will walk you through making an authentic and cost-effective version using simple equipment and fresh vanilla beans.

Tips for this recipe

To ensure the best flavor, use high-quality vodka to imbue your extract with a rich taste. Properly split vanilla beans before infusing them will maximize the release of their oils.

Why you will love this recipe

Making Vanilla Extract at home not only results in an exceptional, aromatic flavor that can’t be bought off-the-shelf but also offers the satisfaction of creating something with your own hands. Plus, it’s incredibly rewarding to use and share this delightful gift.

Ingredients

  • Cheap vodka (enough to fill a 1-liter jar or bottle)
  • Spent vanilla beans (at least 3)

Advised equipment

  1. Jar or Bottle (1-liter size)
  2. Chef’s Knife
  3. Airtight Container
  4. Mortar & Pestle (optional)
  5. Oven-proof Glass Jar with Lid
  6. Measuring Spoon
  7. Funnel
  8. Digital Scale
  9. Food Processor or Blender (optional)

History of the recipe

The art of making Vanilla Extract has its roots in Mexico, where it was first cultivated. The Maya people used to mix vanilla beans with local chocolate and other ingredients. As explorers from Europe discovered these lands, they were introduced to this exquisite flavoring, which eventually became a global staple in baking and cooking.

Fun facts about this recipe

Vanilla Extract has become one of the most beloved and versatile ingredients worldwide. Did you know that it’s not actually made from vanilla beans, but rather derived from a pod? The beans are soaked in alcohol to extract their flavorful essence—a process which requires patience as they can take up to two years to develop the desired richness.

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Vanilla Extract

Vanilla Extract

amanda

Equipment

  • - Jar or Bottle (1-liter size) - To store homemade Vanilla Extract

  • - Chef's Knife - For safely handling and splitting vanilla beans

  • - Airtight Container - To store fresh vanilla beans before making extract

  • - Mortar & Pestle - Optional for grinding vanilla beans into powder (not common)

  • - Oven-proof Glass Jar with Lid - For drying split vanilla beans, if you choose to do so yourself

  • - Measuring Spoon - To accurately measure ingredients like alcohol and sugar for making the extract

  • - Funnel - To transfer homemade Vanilla Extract into jars without spillage

  • - Digital Scale - For precise measurement of ingredients, especially if you're splitting beans to weight them

  • - Food Processor or Blender (Optional) - Some use a food processor to crush vanilla beans before making extract

Ingredients

  • Cheap vodka, enough to fill your jar or bottle

  • Spent vanilla beans, at least 3

Instructions

1

Instruction 1

Fill a mason jar or bottle with vodka. After you use the seeds of a vanilla bean in a recipe, rinse off the vanilla bean and put it in the vodka. You'll need at least 3 vanilla beans in there for at least 3 weeks to get a good extract going, but it's fine to use more beans, too. Your extract is ready when it is a lovely brown color and it smells like vanilla.
2

Instruction 2

Either pour the extract it into a new bottle and start over or keep topping off the working bottle with vodka and keep shoving more vanilla beans into the bottle. As long as you don't let it get too empty, you can keep using the extract indefinitely even as you continue to top it off.
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