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DIY Vanilla Extract

DIY Vanilla Extract

Recently I saw a post on Chocolate & Zucchini on making your own vanilla extract. Since this sells for nearly as much as HP printer ink at the super market I thought it would be worth looking into.

As it turns out it’s incredibly easy to make and totally worth doing. I followed this “recipe” from Chocolate & Zucchini.


Homemade Vanilla Extract
- 3 medium vanilla beans, or 1 1/2 fat ones
- 1 cup rum or vodka

Homemade Vanilla Extract via Chocolate & Zucchini


 
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Step 1Sanitize, slice, pour.

Sanitize, slice, pour.
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There really isn’t much to this. I picked up a pound of “Grade B Extract Vanilla Beans” on eBay for $20 shipped and a handle of Vodka for $17.99. As it turns out a pound of vanilla beans is an incredible amount of beans. Recipes seem to recommend anywhere from 3 to 6 beans per cup of alcohol. I used 6 and still had enough beans to make this recipe 5 or 6 times over. Something to think about when making that eBay order.

Figuring 3 beans per cup of alcohol I calculated out the amount of alcohol and number of beans needed (a lot).

The steps for preparing this are pretty simple.

1. Remove vodka or rum from original bottle
2. Split vanilla beans in half
3. Sanitize bottle
4. Put beans in the bottom of the now empty and sanitized bottle
5. Pour vodka back into bottle
6. Cap it, date it and throw it in the back of your cabinet.


Sanitizing the bottle may have been overkill but I’d rather be safe than sorry. Give the bottle a shake everyday for the first week and then once or twice a week for the rest of the infusion period.

Your vodka/rum should be “extract” in 2 months but will continue to improve in flavor for at least another 4-6 months.
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85 comments
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Nov 22, 2011. 6:46 PMastreet3 says:
This would make for an excellent gift over the holidays. love the simplicity of the recipe. thanks for sharing.
Nov 1, 2011. 11:34 PMbowow0807 says:
can i just use 3 beans for like 750 ml of vodka and just leave them there for longer and maybe add more if i get any
Sep 15, 2011. 1:57 PMchamunks says:
Would it be outrageous to think that you could possibly distill the alcohol out of this to reclaim some of the alcohol to make everclear out of it? or something along those lines?
Aug 8, 2011. 7:50 PMvgavrich says:
That is the most vanilla beans Ive ever seen in one place :o i think these would make a great christmas/housewarming gift!
Aug 7, 2011. 8:20 AMicelandinthesun says:
I love that it is basically just one step. Thank you!
May 10, 2011. 9:54 AMSHIFT! says:
Delicious! Just a question though, do you know where the "French" in French Vanilla comes from? Because I have no idea.
Aug 4, 2011. 7:42 AMoaxacamatt says:
French comes from the fact that 'they' use an egg or sometimes just a yolk in with their vanilla ice cream. That is why French vanilla is golden in color.
May 12, 2011. 8:28 AMfleurdejava says:
Tahitian Organic Vanilla Beans: Tahiti is in France ! (it is a over-sea french "departement")
May 11, 2011. 11:01 AMgdhenson says:
I'm assuming it has something to do with surrendering yourself over to the flavor of vanilla? Just a guess, I'm no historian.
May 12, 2011. 4:00 PMconmac863 says:
Ok that was funny....
May 11, 2011. 12:09 PMgdhenson says:
We should both be ashamed of our boorish sense of humor. .
Aug 4, 2011. 7:38 AMoaxacamatt says:
Why do you sanitize the vodka bottle when you are using that same bottle to do your extraction. The alcohol inside the unbroken bottle should be sanitizing enough, shouldn't it?
Cheers
May 24, 2011. 2:43 PMPat Chouli says:
I can't wait to try this! I have all the ingredients now and am ready-to-go. Thank you for the tip of buying the beans on ebay.... What a price difference compared to buying them from the local grocers. BIG SAVINGS!

My husband and I have tried every brand of vanilla (including organic brands) from all of our local grocers and finally settled on a brand that we like the smell of... BUT, it costs $10/bottle and we go through a lot of vanilla and purchase a bottle each month. EXPENSIVE!

I love the idea of saving money and possibly having a better smelling / tasting product too. I'll post back when my vanilla is ready to let all know how it's turned out. :)

Thank you!! :)
May 22, 2011. 10:20 PMdeladybex says:
I have made Vanilla for many years myself and enjoy the process of being able to make a quility item. It is fun to do this and it gives the self satifaction of being creativly simple. deLadyBex
May 12, 2011. 2:55 PMimusewhipped says:
Weird. Here in Australia, you can get vanilla beans, but they're usually sold in a quantity of 1 or 2 per pack, and way more expemsive than buying vanilla extract. Probably a freshness issue, as I don't think we grow vanilla here.
May 19, 2011. 3:13 AMasmith-9 says:
You can buy them in bulk from specialty food stores or online and Vanilla Extract and Vanilla Bean Extract is still more expensive than making this. Vanilla Essence (fake crap) is cheap and cheap, but you have to use more.
May 19, 2011. 3:10 AMasmith-9 says:
I have made bourbon vanilla extract by using some Wild Turkey in place of vodka. I doubled the vanilla beans and added a cinnamon quill to the mix. Through the year, I scour the Op Shops for odd but lovely bottles and for Xmas, I sanitise and fill the bottles. I pop at least one new vanilla bean in each small bottle and let people know they can top it up if they want and once it smells like vanilla, instead of bourbon, it's ready to go again. These were a BIG HIT as Xmas presents.
May 12, 2011. 10:02 AMlubinka says:
If you buy vanilla beans in such large quantities, you might consider using some of them for flavouring sugar - just put one or two pods in your jar with sugar, et voila: in a week or two it will smell great.
Thanks for the instructable.
May 17, 2011. 2:24 PMmousewrites says:
I love vanilla sugar. This is a great, easy gift, too.
May 12, 2011. 2:58 PMLaffyDuck187 says:
This seems like a great idea, but isn't a pound of vanilla beans expensive? It probably costs a lot more than printer ink, or the vanilla extract you can buy at the store. Like the guy who posted before me, where I live, a gallon of vanilla extract costs $3.00. Good for a DIY project, but probably not a good idea if you're a penny-pincher in need of vanilla extract.
May 17, 2011. 2:22 PMmousewrites says:
I got a pound of beans for 16$ on eBay. Everclear was 12$. Total for 128 oz of extract: 28$, or 22 cents a oz.

This extract is pretty nice and a good bulk price: 32 oz for 33$, or 1.03$ a oz.

Even with the bottles factored in, the homemade is cheaper. Wherever you are getting a gallon of good vanilla extract for 3$, you should buy it in bulk and sell it to the rest of us. :D

May 12, 2011. 8:24 PMmslaynie says:
Are you talking good vanilla extract, or the fake stuff? Where I am, it's easily $5 for a tiny little bottle of it, maybe 10 ounces?
May 13, 2011. 2:53 PMLaffyDuck187 says:
The good vanilla extract.
May 13, 2011. 2:58 PMLaffyDuck187 says:
Actually, I was exaggerating a little, but still, here, it's pretty cheap (around $15.00 for a gallon).
May 15, 2011. 1:47 PMscottjl says:
Made my first batches today. Vanilla beans from Vanilla Products USA from eBay. Went the Everclear route, 1 part (2 cups) Everclear + 2 parts (4 cups) water. Will be looking forward to this in a few months.
May 15, 2011. 7:13 PMscottjl says:
hmm not sure why the photos are upsidedown. no way to fix them on here. :(
May 13, 2011. 10:56 AMboarder2k7 says:
My favorite place to get vanilla beans (or any other spice for that matter) is www.myspicesage.com

They have a wide variety of extremely fresh spices, and great pricing in my opinion. There is always a special running where you get something for free with your order as well, and vanilla beans are often one of the free items if you care to wait for them to come up.
May 15, 2011. 1:11 PMscottjl says:
At $10 for a 10oz bottle or $3.50 for 2 beans I think eBay is the cheaper way to go.
May 15, 2011. 11:53 AMjimvandamme says:
We made this the same way except step 1 was to go to Madagascar and buy some beans at the bazary. They're still expensive there, though. The Malagasy soak all kinds of fruity things in rum to make extracts. You can grind up the beans in a food processor and put the little bits into ice cream. Concentrated vanilla bombs, yum!
May 13, 2011. 5:13 AMcindygary75 says:
I did this last year - got some old Cracker Barrel syrup bottles and used those; just couldn't find labels to fit! Anyhoo, once you've bottled the stuff, you can add alcohol to the beans again - I didn't know this and threw the precious, pricey beans away - I'll remember next time!
May 12, 2011. 2:51 PMoregonherbalist says:
Do not use the name VANILLIN this is the trade name for synthetic vanilla flavoring agent.
May 12, 2011. 5:10 PMgromit1943 says:
I think you'll find that VANILLIN is the chemical name for the active ingredient in the extract . . . .
May 12, 2011. 11:54 PMoregonherbalist says:
Yes, but this is an extract and not an isolate of vanillin only. So it would be a misnomer to label the bottle 'vanillin' and if used alone it means synthetic. An isolate would have a description of its concentration.
May 12, 2011. 7:43 PMincredibleweirdo says:
Vanillin is a synthetic vanilla flavor made from wood pulp.
May 12, 2011. 9:32 PMpurplemutant says:
Yes but vanillin also occurs naturally. Vanillin is what gives vanilla beans their vanilla flavor and smell. So says wikipedia. The vanillin in imitation vanilla extract is probably from wood pulp.
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