Is it too early to start thinking about the Christmas holidays. Absolutely. Do I do any of my holiday gift buying before Labor Day? Under no circumstances. I might have my meal plan figured out for the week, but I’m the mom on Halloween morning looking for electrical tape to try and make a Bat Man costume.
But, I do have a great idea that you can do now for holiday gifts or holiday baking — DIY vanilla extract! Why am I talking about this now after I just said I don’t plan for the holidays this far in advance? Because although vanilla extract takes minutes to make, it requires about 6 weeks to sit and brew. Still a little early to think about this, but lots of holidays are coming up and I will not be thinking about making vanilla extract in November. #thanksgivingtrumpsall
My assistant Lauren gave me a bottle of homemade vanilla extract last year for Christmas and I was absolutely delighted to receive it. First of all, I just love homemade gifts, especially homemade food gifts! And vanilla is something I use a lot of, so I was really grateful to be given something so good AND useful. I love the essence of vanilla in baked goods and desserts. In fact, I think it’s one of those ingredients that has a natural sweetness to it without actually containing a sweetener. Just an FYI, even if you don’t make your own vanilla extract, do read the ingredient label on commercially-prepared ones. Somehow manufacturers are allowed to use the word “pure” on the label while adding things like corn syrup solids. So troubling.
Recently, I had Lauren provide me a little tutorial on making vanilla extract and give me all her sources for labeling and making these look so cute. Here’s what you’ll need:
Grade B Vanilla Beans: Grade B beans are best for extract as they are too dry for cooking, but still are high quality in taste and flavor. We used 3/4 of a pound of these Madagascar bourbon vanilla beans. Bourbon, by the way, refers to the island of Bourbon in Madagascar, not the alcohol. Bourbon vanilla is the most flavorful of all the vanillas and what I use for all my baking.
Here’s what you do:
1-2 months before you want vanilla extract, prepare the batch. I like the ratio of 4 whole vanilla beans to 8 ounces of vodka.
Split the vanilla beans lengthwise and place them in the large bottle. Cover the beans completely with vodka. Secure the lid on the bottle and swirl it around a bit. Store at room temperature for 4-6 weeks, the longer the better. It will darken as time passes. The batch above has been sitting for 6 weeks.
When you transfer the extract to smaller bottles for gifting, add the beans to the bottles as well. As you use the extract, just keep adding a little vodka to replace what you took out. Vanilla extract lasts indefinitely. You can also take vanilla beans from which you scraped the seeds and add them to vanilla extract in the works.
Store finished extract in the pantry (not the refrigerator) away from light and heat.
Have any of you made other extracts? I think I have the extract-making bug!
6 Comments
Hi Pamela,
We delivered our first 5 bottles today and they were awesome! you made this the easiest gift!
The kids were so proud! The best part is the giving continues as we will be a part of some delicious baking in so many homes. Whenever I make a new dish Sean Luca and Angela always ask, ” Did ZiZi’S cousin “tell” you how to make this.”?
Thank you!
Domenica
I am soooooo excited this was such a success for you and the kids! How fun! BTW, don’t think that I don’t know what an amazing cook you are. Your reputation precedes you!
Hi Pamela! How many 4 ounce bottles was Lauren able to fill from the one batch? Or do you have an average of how many gifts we can expect per batch of vanilla?
Wonderful gifting idea!
Hi Emily, sorry I missed this. Lauren thinks it was about 12 + bottles per 1.75 liters of vodka.
Hi Pamela, is there a special software program you used to create the labels? I really like the curved text. I have a PC. I’ve just ordered my supplies so I figured I would get a head start on the labels. Thank you.
Lauren used the Avery online program to make the labels (link below)…they have a variety of fonts and clip art you can use and you just enter the type of label you have so you don’t have to print a million test sheets to get them lined up. It’s also a lot more user-friendly for designing something unique which is what she did.
http://www.avery.com/avery/en_us/Templates-&-Software/Software/Avery-Design–Print-Online.htm?cmp_id=search-google-General%20-%20Brand%20-%20Exact%20-%20Sitelink&gclid=CjwKEAjw67SvBRC1m5zPv4GboAUSJAB6MJlkDvbE2yrYyPhMEr4DE_2IbSJRFlStnCUF_vU6ip3gzRoCSWHw_wcB