Difference between revisions of "Vanilla" - New World Encyclopedia

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[[Image:Vanilla 6beans.JPG|right|200px|thumb|Vanilla pods]]
 
[[Image:Vanilla 6beans.JPG|right|200px|thumb|Vanilla pods]]
'''Vanilla''' is a [[flavouring]] derived from [[orchid]]s in the genus ''[[Vanilla (orchid)|Vanilla]]'' native to [[Mexico]]. The name came from the [[Spanish language|Spanish]] word "{{lang|es|vainilla}}," meaning "little pod."<ref>[http://www.efloras.org/florataxon.aspx?flora_id=1&taxon_id=134375 "''Vanilla'' Miller"] by James D. Ackerman, ''Flora of North America'' 26:507, June 2003.</ref> Vanilla is valued for its sweet flavour and scent and is widely used in the preparation of [[dessert]]s and [[perfume]]s. Today, the majority of the world's vanilla is produced in a small region on the  island of [[Madagascar]], an [[island]] in the [[Indian Ocean]].<ref>[http://www.rodellevanilla.com/GrowingRegions.htm Rodelle Vanilla Products - About Vanilla<!Bot generated title >]</ref>
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'''Vanilla''' is the common name and [[genus]] name for a group of [[vine]]-like, [[evergreen]], tropical and sub-tropical plants in the orchid family ([[Orchidaceae]]), including the species ''Vanilla planifolia'' from whose seedpods a popular flavoring extract is derived. The term also is used for those long, narrow seedpods of ''V. planifolia'' and for the flvoring agent derived from its cured seedpods or synthetically produced.  
 +
 
 +
The name came from the [[Spanish language|Spanish]] word "{{lang|es|vainilla}}," meaning "little pod" (Ackerman 2003). Vanilla is valued for its sweet flavor and scent and is widely used in the preparation of [[dessert]]s and [[perfume]]s.
 +
 
 +
==''Vanilla'' genus==
 +
{{Taxobox
 +
| name = Vanilla Orchid
 +
| image = Vanilla1web.jpg
 +
| image_width = 250px
 +
| image_caption = ''Vanilla planifolia''
 +
| regnum = [[Plant]]ae
 +
| divisio = [[Flowering plant|Magnoliophyta]]
 +
| classis = [[Monocotyledon|Liliopsida]]
 +
| ordo = [[Asparagales]]
 +
| familia = [[Orchidaceae]]
 +
| subfamilia = [[Vanilloideae]]
 +
| tribus = Vanilleae
 +
| subtribus = Vanillinae
 +
| genus = '''''Vanilla''''' (Plumier ex. [[Philip Miller|Mill.]], [[1754]])
 +
| subdivision_ranks = Species
 +
| subdivision =  
 +
About 110 species
 +
}}
 +
'''''Vanilla''''' is a [[genus]] of about 110 species in the orchid family ([[Orchidaceae]]), including the species ''Vanilla planifolia'' from which commercial [[vanilla]] flavoring is derived.  The name came from the [[Spanish language|Spanish]] word "vainilla", diminutive form of "vaina" (meaning "[[sheath]]"), which is in turn derived from [[Latin]] "[[vagina]]".
 +
 
 +
This evergreen genus occurs worldwide in tropical and subtropical regions, from tropical America to tropical Asia, New Guinea and West Africa. It was known to the [[Aztec]]s for its flavoring qualities. It is also grown commercially (esp. ''Vanilla planifolia'', ''Vanilla pompona'' and ''Vanilla tahitensis'').
 +
[[Image:Vanilla planifolia.jpg|thumb|left|''Vanilla planifolia'' - habit]]
 +
This genus of [[vine]]-like plants has a [[monopodial]] climbing habit. They can form long vines with a length of more than 35 m, with alternate [[Leaf|leaves]] spread along its length. The short, oblong, dark green leaves of the ''Vanilla'' are thick and leathery, even fleshy in some species, though there are a significant number of species that have their leaves reduced to [[scale (zoology)|scale]]s or have become nearly or totally leafless and appear to use their green climbing stems for [[photosynthesis]]. Long and strong [[aerial root]]s grow from each node.
 +
 
 +
The racemose [[inflorescence]]s short-lived [[flower]]s arise successively on short peduncles from the leaf axils or scales. There may be up to 100 flowers on a single raceme, but usually no more than 20. The flowers are quite large and attractive with white, green, greenish yellow or cream colors. Their [[sepal]]s and [[petal]]s are similar. Each flower opens up in the morning and closes late in the afternoon, never to re-open. If pollination has not occurred meanwhile, it will be shed.
 +
 
 +
The [[labellum|lip]] is tubular-shaped and surrounds the long, bristly [[column (botany)|column]], opening up, as the bell of a trumpet, at its apex. The [[anther]] is at the top of the column and hangs over the [[carpel|stigma]], separated by the rostellum. Blooming occurs only when the flowers are fully grown. Most species have a sweet scent. The flowers are self-fertile but need pollinators to perform this task. The flowers are presumed to be pollinated by stingless bees and certain hummingbirds, which visit the flowers primarily for its [[nectar]]. But hand pollination is the best method in commercially grown ''Vanilla''.
 +
[[Image:Baunilha1.jpg|thumb|right|250px|Vanilla planifolia - close-up]]
 +
The fruit ('[[vanilla]] bean') is an elongate, fleshy seed pod 10-20 cm long. It ripens gradually (8 to 9 months after flowering), eventually turning black in color and giving off a strong aroma. Each pod contains thousands of minute seeds, but it is the pod that is used to create vanilla flavoring. Significantly, ''Vanilla planifolia'' is the only orchid used for industrial purposes (in the food industry and in the cosmetic industry).
 +
 
 +
''Vanilla'' species are used as food plants by the [[larva]]e of some [[Lepidoptera]] species including ''[[Hypercompe|Hypercompe eridanus]]'' and ''[[Hypercompe|Hypercompe icasia]]''.
 +
 
 +
==Species with common names== 
 +
* ''[[Vanilla aphylla]]'': Leafless Vanilla
 +
* ''[[Vanilla barbellata]]'': Small Bearded Vanilla, Wormvine Orchid, Leafless Vanilla, Snake Orchid.
 +
* ''[[Vanilla chamissonis]]'': [[Adelbert von Chamisso|Chamisso's]] Vanilla
 +
* ''[[Vanilla claviculata]]'': Green Withe
 +
* ''[[Vanilla dilloniana]]'': Leafless Vanilla
 +
* ''[[Vanilla edwallii]]'': Edwall's Vanilla
 +
* ''[[Vanilla mexicana]]'': Mexican Vanilla
 +
* ''[[Vanilla odorata]]'': Inflated Vanilla
 +
* ''[[Vanilla phaeantha]]'': Leafy Vanilla
 +
* ''[[Vanilla planifolia]]'': Vanilla, Flat-plane Leaved Vanilla, West Indian Vanilla
 +
* ''[[Vanilla poitaei]]'': [[Pierre Antoine Poiteau|Poiteau's]] Vanilla
 +
* ''[[Vanilla siamensis]]'': Thai Vanilla
 +
 
 +
[[Image:Map Vanilla.png|thumb|centre|400px|Worldwide distribution of ''Vanilla'' species.]]
 +
 
 +
 
 +
===''Vanilla planifolia===
 +
'''''Vanilla planifolia''''' is a species of [[vanilla (orchid)|vanilla]]. It is one of the primary sources for [[vanilla]] [[flavouring]], due to its high [[vanillin]] content.
 +
 
 +
Vanilla planifolia is found in [[Central America]] and the [[West Indies]]. It prefers hot, wet, tropical climates. It is harvested mostly in Mexico and Madagascar.
 +
 
 +
[[Image:Koeh-278.jpg|thumb|left|250px|''Vanilla planifolia'' in [[Köhler's Medicinal Plants]]]]
 +
Like all members of the Vanilla genus, Vanilla planifolia is a vine. It uses its fleshy roots to support itself as it grows.
 +
 
 +
Flowers are greenish-yellow, with a diameter of 5 cm (2 in). They last only a day, and must be [[pollinated]] manually, during the morning, if fruit is desired. The plants are [[self-fertilization|self-fertile]], and pollination simply requires a transfer of the pollen from the [[anther]] to the [[stigma]]. If pollination does not occur, the flower is dropped the next day. In the wild, there is less than 1% chance that the flowers will be pollinated, so in order to receive a steady flow of fruit, the flowers must be hand-pollinated when grown on farms. Hand pollinators can pollinate about 1,000 flowers per day.
 +
 
 +
Fruit is produced only on mature plants, which are generally over 3 m (10 ft) long. The fruits are 15-23 cm (6-9 in) long pods (often incorrectly called beans). They mature after about five months, at which point they are harvested and [[curing (food preservation)|cured]]. Curing ferments and dries the pods while minimizing the loss of [[essential oil]]s. Vanilla extract is obtained from this portion of the plant.
 +
 
  
==Vanilla orchid==
 
{{main|Vanilla (orchid)}}
 
  
 
The main species harvested for [[vanillin]] is ''Vanilla planifolia''.  Although it is native to [[Mexico]], it is now widely grown throughout the tropics. [[Madagascar]] is the world's largest producer. Additional sources include ''Vanilla pompona'' and ''Vanilla tahitiensis'' (grown in [[Tahiti]]), although the vanillin content of these species is much less than ''Vanilla planifolia''{{Fact|date=January 2008}}.
 
The main species harvested for [[vanillin]] is ''Vanilla planifolia''.  Although it is native to [[Mexico]], it is now widely grown throughout the tropics. [[Madagascar]] is the world's largest producer. Additional sources include ''Vanilla pompona'' and ''Vanilla tahitiensis'' (grown in [[Tahiti]]), although the vanillin content of these species is much less than ''Vanilla planifolia''{{Fact|date=January 2008}}.
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==Culinary uses==
 
==Culinary uses==
 +
 +
Today, the majority of the world's vanilla is produced in a small region on the  island of [[Madagascar]], an [[island]] in the [[Indian Ocean]].<ref>[http://www.rodellevanilla.com/GrowingRegions.htm Rodelle Vanilla Products - About Vanilla<!-- Bot generated title —>]</ref>
 +
 
{| class="wikitable" style="float:right; margin: 0 0 0.5em 1em"
 
{| class="wikitable" style="float:right; margin: 0 0 0.5em 1em"
 
|+ 2006 Top Vanilla Producers
 
|+ 2006 Top Vanilla Producers
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== References ==
 
== References ==
{{reflist}}
+
 
 +
<ref>[http://www.efloras.org/florataxon.aspx?flora_id=1&taxon_id=134375 "''Vanilla'' Miller"] by James D. Ackerman, ''Flora of North America'' 26:507, June 2003.</ref>
 +
 
 +
*[http://www.ntbg.org/plants/plant_details.php National Tropical Botanical Garden]
 +
*[http://florawww.eeb.uconn.edu/acc_num/198500001.html University of Connecticut EEB Plant Growth Facilities]
 +
 
 +
Herbst
 +
 
 +
Bender and Bender
 +
 
  
 
== External links ==
 
== External links ==
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[[Category:Plants]]
 
[[Category:Plants]]
  
{{credit|Vanilla|204773272}}
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{{credit|Vanilla|204773272|Vanilla_(genus)|204872918|Vanilla_planifolia|194597857}}

Revision as of 23:50, 11 April 2008

Vanilla pods

Vanilla is the common name and genus name for a group of vine-like, evergreen, tropical and sub-tropical plants in the orchid family (Orchidaceae), including the species Vanilla planifolia from whose seedpods a popular flavoring extract is derived. The term also is used for those long, narrow seedpods of V. planifolia and for the flvoring agent derived from its cured seedpods or synthetically produced.

The name came from the Spanish word "vainilla," meaning "little pod" (Ackerman 2003). Vanilla is valued for its sweet flavor and scent and is widely used in the preparation of desserts and perfumes.

Vanilla genus

Vanilla Orchid
Vanilla planifolia
Vanilla planifolia
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Division: Magnoliophyta
Class: Liliopsida
Order: Asparagales
Family: Orchidaceae
Subfamily: Vanilloideae
Tribe: Vanilleae
Subtribe: Vanillinae
Genus: Vanilla (Plumier ex. Mill., 1754)
Species

About 110 species

Vanilla is a genus of about 110 species in the orchid family (Orchidaceae), including the species Vanilla planifolia from which commercial vanilla flavoring is derived. The name came from the Spanish word "vainilla", diminutive form of "vaina" (meaning "sheath"), which is in turn derived from Latin "vagina".

This evergreen genus occurs worldwide in tropical and subtropical regions, from tropical America to tropical Asia, New Guinea and West Africa. It was known to the Aztecs for its flavoring qualities. It is also grown commercially (esp. Vanilla planifolia, Vanilla pompona and Vanilla tahitensis).

File:Vanilla planifolia.jpg
Vanilla planifolia - habit

This genus of vine-like plants has a monopodial climbing habit. They can form long vines with a length of more than 35 m, with alternate leaves spread along its length. The short, oblong, dark green leaves of the Vanilla are thick and leathery, even fleshy in some species, though there are a significant number of species that have their leaves reduced to scales or have become nearly or totally leafless and appear to use their green climbing stems for photosynthesis. Long and strong aerial roots grow from each node.

The racemose inflorescences short-lived flowers arise successively on short peduncles from the leaf axils or scales. There may be up to 100 flowers on a single raceme, but usually no more than 20. The flowers are quite large and attractive with white, green, greenish yellow or cream colors. Their sepals and petals are similar. Each flower opens up in the morning and closes late in the afternoon, never to re-open. If pollination has not occurred meanwhile, it will be shed.

The lip is tubular-shaped and surrounds the long, bristly column, opening up, as the bell of a trumpet, at its apex. The anther is at the top of the column and hangs over the stigma, separated by the rostellum. Blooming occurs only when the flowers are fully grown. Most species have a sweet scent. The flowers are self-fertile but need pollinators to perform this task. The flowers are presumed to be pollinated by stingless bees and certain hummingbirds, which visit the flowers primarily for its nectar. But hand pollination is the best method in commercially grown Vanilla.

Vanilla planifolia - close-up

The fruit ('vanilla bean') is an elongate, fleshy seed pod 10-20 cm long. It ripens gradually (8 to 9 months after flowering), eventually turning black in color and giving off a strong aroma. Each pod contains thousands of minute seeds, but it is the pod that is used to create vanilla flavoring. Significantly, Vanilla planifolia is the only orchid used for industrial purposes (in the food industry and in the cosmetic industry).

Vanilla species are used as food plants by the larvae of some Lepidoptera species including Hypercompe eridanus and Hypercompe icasia.

Species with common names

  • Vanilla aphylla: Leafless Vanilla
  • Vanilla barbellata: Small Bearded Vanilla, Wormvine Orchid, Leafless Vanilla, Snake Orchid.
  • Vanilla chamissonis: Chamisso's Vanilla
  • Vanilla claviculata: Green Withe
  • Vanilla dilloniana: Leafless Vanilla
  • Vanilla edwallii: Edwall's Vanilla
  • Vanilla mexicana: Mexican Vanilla
  • Vanilla odorata: Inflated Vanilla
  • Vanilla phaeantha: Leafy Vanilla
  • Vanilla planifolia: Vanilla, Flat-plane Leaved Vanilla, West Indian Vanilla
  • Vanilla poitaei: Poiteau's Vanilla
  • Vanilla siamensis: Thai Vanilla
Worldwide distribution of Vanilla species.


Vanilla planifolia

Vanilla planifolia is a species of vanilla. It is one of the primary sources for vanilla flavouring, due to its high vanillin content.

Vanilla planifolia is found in Central America and the West Indies. It prefers hot, wet, tropical climates. It is harvested mostly in Mexico and Madagascar.

Vanilla planifolia in Köhler's Medicinal Plants

Like all members of the Vanilla genus, Vanilla planifolia is a vine. It uses its fleshy roots to support itself as it grows.

Flowers are greenish-yellow, with a diameter of 5 cm (2 in). They last only a day, and must be pollinated manually, during the morning, if fruit is desired. The plants are self-fertile, and pollination simply requires a transfer of the pollen from the anther to the stigma. If pollination does not occur, the flower is dropped the next day. In the wild, there is less than 1% chance that the flowers will be pollinated, so in order to receive a steady flow of fruit, the flowers must be hand-pollinated when grown on farms. Hand pollinators can pollinate about 1,000 flowers per day.

Fruit is produced only on mature plants, which are generally over 3 m (10 ft) long. The fruits are 15-23 cm (6-9 in) long pods (often incorrectly called beans). They mature after about five months, at which point they are harvested and cured. Curing ferments and dries the pods while minimizing the loss of essential oils. Vanilla extract is obtained from this portion of the plant.


The main species harvested for vanillin is Vanilla planifolia. Although it is native to Mexico, it is now widely grown throughout the tropics. Madagascar is the world's largest producer. Additional sources include Vanilla pompona and Vanilla tahitiensis (grown in Tahiti), although the vanillin content of these species is much less than Vanilla planifolia[citation needed].

Vanilla grows as a vine, climbing up an existing tree, pole, or other support. It can be grown in a wood (on trees), in a plantation (on trees or poles), or in a "shader", in increasing orders of productivity. Left alone, it will grow as high as possible on the support, with few flowers. Every year, growers fold the higher parts of the plant downwards so that the plant stays at heights accessible by a standing human. This also greatly stimulates flowering.

Vanilla planifolia - flower.

The distinctively flavoured compounds are found in the fruit, which results from the pollination of the flower. One flower produces one fruit. Vanilla planifolia flowers are hermaphroditic: they carry both male (anther) and female (stigma) organs; however, to avoid self-pollination, a membrane separates those organs. As Charles François Antoine Morren, a Belgian botanist found, the flowers can only be naturally pollinated by a specific Melipone bee found in Mexico. Growers have tried to bring this bee into other growing locales, to no avail. The only way to produce fruits is thus artificial pollination.

A simple and efficient artificial pollination method was introduced in 1841 by a 12-year-old slave named Edmond Albius on Réunion: a method still used today. Using a beveled sliver of bamboo,[1] an agricultural worker folds back the membrane separating the anther and the stigma, then presses the anther on the stigma. The flower is then self-pollinated, and will produce a fruit. The vanilla flower lasts about one day, sometimes less, thus growers have to inspect their plantations every day for open flowers, a labour-intensive task.

The fruit (a seed capsule), if left on the plant, will ripen and open at the end; it will then release the distinctive vanilla smell. The fruit contains tiny, flavourless seeds. In dishes prepared with whole natural vanilla, these seeds are recognizable as black specks.

Like other orchids' seeds, vanilla seed will not germinate without the presence of certain mycorrhizal fungi. Instead, growers reproduce the plant by cutting: they remove sections of the vine with six or more leaf nodes, a root opposite each leaf. The two lower leaves are removed, and this area is buried in loose soil at the base of a support. The remaining upper roots will cling to the support, and often grow down into the soil. Growth is rapid under good conditions.

History

The first to cultivate vanilla were the Totonac people, who inhabit the Mazantla Valley on the Gulf Coast of Mexico in the present-day state of Veracruz. According to Totonac mythology, the tropical orchid was born when Princess Xanat, forbidden by her father from marrying a mortal, fled to the forest with her lover. The lovers were captured and beheaded. Where their blood touched the ground, the vine of the tropical orchid grew.[2]

Drawing of Vanilla from the Florentine Codex (ca. 1580) and description of its use and properties written in the Nahuatl language.

In the fifteenth century, Aztecs from the central highlands of Mexico conquered the Totonacs, and the conquerors soon developed a taste for the vanilla bean. They named the bean tlilxochitl, or "black flower", after the mature bean, which shrivels and turns black shortly after it is picked. After they were subjected to the Aztecs the Totonacs paid their tribute by sending vanilla beans to the Aztec capital, Tenochtitlan.

Vanilla was completely unknown in the Old World before Columbus. Spanish explorers who arrived on the Gulf Coast of Mexico in the early sixteenth century gave vanilla its name. The Spanish and Portuguese sailors and explorers brought vanilla into Africa and Asia in the 16th century. They called it vainilla, or "little pod", The word vanilla entered the English language in the 1754, when the botanist Philip Miller wrote about the genus in his Gardener’s Dictionary.[3]

Until the mid-19th century, Mexico was the chief producer of vanilla. In 1819, however, French entrepreneurs shipped vanilla beans to the Réunion and Mauritius islands with the hope of producing vanilla there. After Edmond Albius, a 12-year-old slave from Réunion Island, discovered how to pollinate the flowers quickly by hand, the pods began to thrive. Soon the tropical orchids were sent from Réunion Island to the Comoros Islands and Madagascar along with instructions for pollinating them. By 1898, Madagascar, Réunion, and the Comoros Islands produced 200 metric tons of vanilla beans, about 80 percent of world production.[4]

The market price of vanilla rose dramatically in the late 1970s, due to a typhoon. Prices stayed stable at this level through the early 1980s despite the pressure of recently introduced Indonesian vanilla. In the mid-1980s, the cartel that had controlled vanilla prices and distribution since its creation in 1930 disbanded. Prices dropped 70 percent over the next few years, to nearly US$20 per kilo. This changed, due to typhoon Huddah, which struck early in the year 2000. The typhoon, political instability, and poor weather in the third year drove vanilla prices to an astonishing US$500 per kilo in 2004, bringing new countries into the vanilla industry. A good crop, coupled with decreased demand caused by the production of imitation vanilla, have pushed the market price down to the $40 per kilo range in the middle of 2005.

Madagascar (mostly the fertile region of Sava) accounts for half of the global production of vanilla. Mexico, once the leading producer of natural vanilla with an annual 500 tons, produced only 10 tons of vanilla in 2006. An estimated 95% of “vanilla” products actually contain artificial vanillin, produced from lignin. [5]

Chemistry

Chemical structure of vanillin

Though there are many compounds present in the extracts of vanilla, the compound vanillin (4-hydroxy-3-methoxybenzaldehyde) is primarily responsible for the characteristic flavour and smell of vanilla. Another minor component of vanilla essential oil is piperonal (heliotropin). Piperonal and other substances affect the odour of natural vanilla.

Vanilla essence comes in two forms. Real seedpod extract is an extremely complicated mixture of several hundred different compounds. Synthetic essence, consisting basically of a solution of synthetic vanillin in ethanol, is derived from phenol and is of high purity.[6]

Stages of production

A vanilla plantation in a wood on Réunion Island
  1. Harvest
    The pods are harvested while green and immature. At this stage, they are odourless.
  2. Killing
    The vegetative tissue of the vanilla pod is killed to prevent further growing. The method of killing varies, but may be accomplished by sun killing, oven killing, hot water killing, killing by scratching, or killing by freezing.
  3. Sweating
    The pods are held for 7 to 10 days under hot (45º-65°C or 115º-150°F) and humid conditions; pods are often placed into fabric covered boxes immediately after boiling. This allows enzymes to process the compounds in the pods into vanillin and other compounds important to the final vanilla flavour.
  4. Drying
    To prevent rotting and to lock the aroma in the pods, the pods are dried. Often, pods are laid out in the sun during the mornings and returned to their boxes in the afternoons. When 25-30% of the pods' weight is moisture (as opposed to the 60-70% they began drying with) they have completed the curing process and will exhibit their fullest aromatic qualities.
  5. Grading
    Once fully cured, the vanilla is sorted by quality and graded.

Culinary uses

Today, the majority of the world's vanilla is produced in a small region on the island of Madagascar, an island in the Indian Ocean.[7]

2006 Top Vanilla Producers
Country Production
(tonnes)
%
Flag of Madagascar Madagascar 6,200 59%
Flag of Indonesia Indonesia 2,399 23%
Flag of People's Republic of China People's Republic of China 1,000 10%
Flag of Mexico Mexico 306
Flag of Turkey Turkey 192
Flag of Tonga Tonga 144
Flag of Uganda Uganda 195
Flag of Comoros Comoros 65
Flag of French Polynesia French Polynesia 50
Flag of Réunion Réunion 23
Flag of Malawi Malawi 20
Flag of Portugal Portugal 10
Flag of Kenya Kenya 8
Flag of Guadeloupe Guadeloupe 8
Flag of Zimbabwe Zimbabwe 3
Source:
UN Food & Agriculture Organization
[1]

There are three main commercial preparations of natural vanilla:

  • whole pod
  • powder (ground pods, kept pure or blended with sugar, starch or other ingredients)[8]
  • extract (in alcoholic solution)[9]

Vanilla flavouring in food may be achieved by adding vanilla extract or by cooking vanilla pods in the liquid preparation. A stronger aroma may be attained if the pods are split in two, exposing more of the pod's surface area to the liquid. In this case, the pods' seeds are mixed into the preparation. Natural vanilla gives a brown or yellow colour to preparations, depending on the concentration.

Vanilla output in 2005

Good quality vanilla has a strong aromatic flavour, but food with small amounts of low quality vanilla or artificial vanilla-like flavourings are far more common, since true vanilla is much more expensive.

A major use of vanilla is in flavouring ice cream. The most common flavour of ice cream is vanilla, and thus most people consider it to be the "default" flavour. By analogy, the term "vanilla" is sometimes used as a synonym for "plain".

The cosmetics industry uses vanilla to make perfume.

The food industry uses methyl and ethyl vanillin. Ethyl vanillin is more expensive, but has a stronger note. Cook's Illustrated ran several taste tests pitting vanilla against vanillin in baked goods and other applications, and to the consternation of the magazine editors, tasters could not differentiate the flavour of vanillin from vanilla;[10] however, for the case of vanilla ice cream, natural vanilla won out.[11]

Medicinal effects

In old medicinal literature, vanilla is described as an aphrodisiac and a remedy for fevers. These purported uses have never been scientifically proven, but it has been shown that vanilla does increase levels of catecholamines (including epinephrine, more commonly known as adrenaline), and as such can also be considered mildly addictive.[12][13]

In an in-vitro test vanilla was able to block quorum sensing in bacteria. This is medically interesting because in many bacteria quorum sensing signals function as a switch for virulence. The microbes only become virulent when the signals indicate that they have the numbers to resist the host immune system response.[14]

The essential oils of vanilla and vanillin are sometimes used in aromatherapy.

Specific types of vanilla

Bourbon vanilla or Bourbon-Madagascar vanilla, produced from Vanilla planifolia plants introduced from the Americas, is the term used for vanilla from Indian Ocean islands such as Madagascar, the Comoros, and Réunion, formerly the Île Bourbon.

Mexican vanilla, made from the native Vanilla planifolia, is produced in much less quantity and marketed as the vanilla from the land of its origin. Vanilla sold in tourist markets around Mexico is sometimes not actual vanilla extract, but is mixed with an extract of the tonka bean, which contains coumarin. Tonka bean extract smells and tastes like vanilla, but coumarin has been shown to cause liver damage in lab animals and is banned in the US by the Food and Drug Administration.[15]

Tahitian vanilla is the name for vanilla from French Polynesia, made with Vanilla tahitiensis. This species is descended from V. plantifolia that was introduced to Tahiti before mutating into a distinct species.[16][dubious]

The term French vanilla is not a type of vanilla, but is often used to designate preparations that have a strong vanilla aroma, and contain vanilla grains. The name originates from the French style of making ice cream custard base with vanilla pods, cream, and egg yolks. Alternatively, French vanilla is taken to refer to a vanilla-custard flavour.[17] Syrup labelled as French vanilla may include custard, caramel or butterscotch flavours in addition to vanilla.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

[18]

Herbst

Bender and Bender


External links

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  1. The Hindu : Flower with money power
  2. Hazen J (1995) Vanilla. Chronicle Books. San Francisco, CA.
  3. Correll D (1953) Vanilla: its botany, history, cultivation and economic importance. Econ Bo 7(4): 291–358.
  4. Rasoanaivo P et al (1998) Essential oils of economic value in Madagascar: Present state of knowledge. HerbalGram 43:31–39,58–59.
  5. Rainforest Vanilla Conservation Association
  6. http://www.baktoflavors.com/pdf/vanilla%20dafna%20ishs.pdf
  7. Rodelle Vanilla Products - About Vanilla
  8. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration requires at least 12.5% of pure vanilla (ground pods or oleoresin) in the mixture [2]
  9. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration requires at least 35% vol. of alcohol and 13.35 ounces of pod per gallon [3]
  10. Vanilla Essence VS Imitation Vanilla Essence - Discuss Cooking Forum
  11. Tasting lab : The Scoop on Vanilla Ice Cream
  12. http://www.organicmd.org/faq.html[4]
  13. http://wwwwww.nwcr.ws/adam/healthillustratedencyclopedia/1/003561.html[5]
  14. [[Choo JH, Rukayadi Y, Hwang JK.|]] (2006 Jun) Inhibition of bacterial quorum sensing by vanilla extract.. Lett Appl Microbiol. 42 (6): 637-41. PMID: 16706905.
  15. IMPORT ALERT IA2807: "DETENTION WITHOUT PHYSICAL EXAMINATION OF COUMARIN IN VANILLA PRODUCTS (EXTRACTS - FLAVORINGS - IMITATIONS)". U.S. Food and Drug Administration Office of Regulatory Affairs (30). Retrieved 2007-12-21.
  16. www.vanilla.com FAQ.
  17. www.vanilla.com FAQ.
  18. "Vanilla Miller" by James D. Ackerman, Flora of North America 26:507, June 2003.