6 Substitutes To Replace Vanilla & Why It Matters

in #food6 years ago (edited)

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Today vanilla is worth more than silver. The price has been steadily climbing for years. Isn't that crazy?

A kilo of vanilla costs around $700 USD (it was $40/kilo back in 2011) This means that you'll be shelling out quite a bit for your own vanilla bean and quality extracts. Rather than investing in such a luxury item, I want to suggest changing things up in the kitchen.

vanilla-589820_960_720.jpgphoto:pixabay

Affordable Alternatives & Creativity

Back in the day, rose water was to bakers what vanilla is today. The Forgotten Art of Using Roses In The Kitchen Long before vanilla extract became common place in the kitchen people used flower essences to enhance the flavours of baked good and sweets. Vanilla comes from an orchid so it makes sense that other floral ingredients were once treasured for their ability to enhance the flavours of food.

Rose water is commonly listed as an ingredient in vintage cook books. It wasn't until the mid-1800s that vanilla was discovered and became and affordable common place ingredient in the kitchen.

Vanilla wasn't always a prized ingredient in baked goods. Maybe it's time we started thinking outside of the box, stop following trends and look at the ingredients we can use locally instead?

There are plenty of options to provide that subtle lift in flavour of baked goods. None of them will taste like vanilla but that's the beauty of being creative and trying new things! Vanilla is after all just a flavouring.

vanilla replacements.jpg

Replacements to try

  • Maple syrup
  • Rose water
  • Dark Rum
  • Bourbon
  • Honey

There really are countless options once you open your mind the the idea that vanilla is not actually necessary. If you start to make bottles of your own extracts at home (very easy to do) the possibilities really get exciting.

IMG_4198.jpg Rose Water is extremely easy to make! Find the recipe here

How Vanilla Is Made

Growing vanilla is extremely labour intensive. Vanilla is derived from orchids. Each flower is hand pollinated and it can take as long as five years between first planting the vine and producing aged extract. The crops are extremely delicate and susceptible to changes in weather, storms and vine disease. It's one of those crops that comes with a lot of risk.

vanilla-719063_960_720.jpgphoto:pixabay vanilla pods on the vine

The pods are harvested by hand and cured in small batches. Its not a simple thing at all! Globe & Mail Article

drying-114135_960_720.jpg photo: pixabay Air drying vanilla bean pods

Vanilla Farmers / Deforestation and Crime

The majority of vanilla is grown in one of the poorest regions on the planet: Madagascar. When prices soar, the profits are not going towards helping the small farmers. Many of them struggle to feed & cloth their family while protecting their crops from the constant threat of theft. It's a very unpleasant situation.

With the discovery of a new strain of orchid that can grow better without shade, Madagascar also runs the risk of even further deforestation. The incredible bio-diversity present on the island is something to be cherished and every day even more of it is destroyed. There is also threat that the small farmers will be pushed out by larger wealthier operations deepening the already prevalent poverty of the country. It's a very bleak situation created by our ignorance.

It certainly makes me feel guilty for every "healthy pour" of vanilla that I've ever dumped into a cake.

Vanillin - The FAKE

With the sky-rocketing pricing and low supply you probably won't be surprised to learn that many of of the vanilla flavoured products that you enjoy are synthetically flavoured. Apparently over 85 percent of vanillin now comes from guaiacol which is a synthesized product from petrochemicals. There are other methods of creating vanillin as well but there is no universal standards for labelling which makes it hard for a consumer to discern exactly what they are buying.

Products containing vanillin have been labelled as "natural flavors”, “other natural flavors", "vanilla flavouring" & "artificial vanilla flavouring" to name a few. You can read more about it here.

Further Reading

Madagascar's vanilla wars: prized spice drives death and deforestation - The Guardian

As the price of pods has soared so has violence – and forest defenders are increasingly risking their lives to protect precious wildlife habitat from being felled for profit
https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2018/mar/31/madagascars-vanilla-wars-prized-spice-drives-death-and-deforestation

Bitter Taste Madagasgar Vanilla - Aljazeera

In the world's top vanilla exporting country farmers live in poverty and constant fear of losing their crop to theft.
https://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/features/2017/01/bitter-taste-madagascar-vanilla-170131073036652.html

My suggestion to you - try something new. Start looking at food in a different way and explore new locally sourced possibilities.


[@walkerland ]
Building a greener, more beautiful world one seed at a time.
Homesteading | Gardening | Frugal Living | Preserving Food| From Scratch Cooking|

You can also find me at: walkerland.ca | Facebook

Main Image Photo copyright: Pixabay

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This was great, and thank you for all the extra links. I had no idea how labor intensive it was 0_0

I truly admire the skill that goes into growing it. Glad you found it interesting! :)

Years ago, back when we were new to prepping, before we realized that hoarding wasn't sustainable and before we became homesteaders, I remember reading an article that vanilla prices were going to skyrocket within a few years. The price at that time was about $10-12 for a 16 oz bottle. I stocked up and told my family to do the same, but then the price didn't change much and we went through our stock. I guess they were off a few years!

Its been so volatile! I think it's one of those things that will always be pretty uncertain. Now that I know just how much work goes into making it I certainly value it more.

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Wow, thank you for digging into this topic and educating us! I've noticed on cooking shows how much vanilla bean is used...even the little kids on Kids' Baking Championship use the heck out of it like it's nothing! Then I go to Kroger and I'm like "$17 for something I'll only get one item out of?! No thanks!!"

Now bourbon is something that's nearly always around our house, and comes in a nice big bottle for the cost of 2 vanilla beans 🤣

Exactly! It's just a matter of experimenting and enjoying new flavours. We've usually got some bourbon on hand as well. ;)

WHAT a great post! I have always been wanting to make my own vanilla from the vanilla beans an alcohol- just never have but after reading (or trying to read the words) what synthetic vanilla is being sold I may have to do so.

It's impossible to trust labelling these days. They are such cheaters! I find it crazy that the companies that care have to jump through hoops and have special labelling, testing etc, and all the others can just use loopholes and use terms that "imply" its something that it isn't.

If you can get your hands on some good vanilla beans you are set! I haven't bought any (or even seen any) in a long while but I do love the scent.

So interesting! I knew of the incredible scarcity and wars over vanilla, but not about the history of rose water in cooking! Thanks for teaching me something new I’m excited to look more into!

Once at the Huntington Gardens in CA, I got to smell a vanilla orchid— OMG pure heaven! Really incredible earthen treasures!

Oh wow what a lovely experience! I would love to see a vanilla orchid. Can you imagine standing in a field of them? It just amazes me the skill that must go into growing them in such numbers.

Cooking with roses and other flower essences makes the experience so much more enjoyable for me - maybe it's the scents uplifting my spirit because I am always inhaling them intentionally. It seems so indulgent and luxurious in some way.

Very interesting. Thanks for sharing. I knew the price had been going up for a while, but had no idea the true "cost". I will definitely think twice before replenishing my stock of vanilla. I don't bake very often, but I love the idea of trying new flavors in its stead!

Yes, the true "cost" is quite disheartening. It seems as though many popular imports cause such chaos to the planet and the people who work the land to supply it.

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