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Give Homemade This Holiday Season

Concocting your own vanilla extract is easy and makes a great gift.

In the off-chance you haven't completed your holiday shopping after all of the Brown Thursday, Black Friday, Shop Local Saturday and Cyber Monday sales, perhaps you'd like to make gifts this year.

One simple kitchen project that can be a thoughtful gift for the bakers and cooks in your life is homemade vanilla extract.

Here's why.

First, gifting little bottles or Mason jars with ribbon on them is just darn cute. Second, pure vanilla extract (not the chemically imitation stuff) is expensive. Third, it's actually super easy for even the non-chefs among us to put together.

Here's how you do it.

Purchase vanilla beans whole in the bulk food aisle of a grocery store or order them online. Vanilla Saffron Imports, a San Francisco-based company, has several varieties of beans available on its website. Although the beans can be pricey, there are good deals to be found and tricks, such as ordering "chef quality beans." These beans aren't as pretty and plump, but do the job when drowned in liquor.

You also need the booze. Probably a lot of booze.

There are a few lines of thinking when it comes to which alcohol to steep the beans in. Vodka gives the most pure extract. Bourbon can be very flavorful (so much so you may just want to pour the vanilla extract over some ice cubes and sip it). Rum also works for vanilla extracting.

A half-gallon jug of liquor will make about nine 8-ounce Mason jars of vanilla extract. If you don't need that much or are going for a cute factor, try this method: buy mini bottles of liquor, sip a little off the top and drop the beans in.

Some say brown bottles are better for the beans to age in because it keeps light out. Others prefer the sunlight.

Regardless of what vessel you put the beans and liquor in, here are the basic steps to follow:

  • Split the vanilla bean lengthwise but leave the top connected. Scissors work fine for this.
  • Put the beans in the bottle or jar. You may need to bend them. The general consensus seems to be about four or five beans per 8-ounce jar or bottle. 
  • Cover the beans with your alcohol of choice.
  • Seal, shake and store the bottles or jars.

The extract is ready to use in eight weeks. A label or tag attached to the jar or bottle can explain this to the lucky recipient of this homemade holiday gift. Also, remember to note that the beans can be reused. Just top off with more liquor and let them steep again.

Some people strain the extract using a coffee filter before use, but if you don't mind teensy tiny particles of bean, you should be fine just scooping spoonfuls out of the jar when baking.

The beans will lose some essence after about a year, but there are ways to re-purpose the pods, such as making vanilla sugar or salt.

If you're looking for handmade gifts but aren't the crafty type, find a local vendor on Etsy to purchase homemade or vintage wares from.

 

 

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John Pivirotto April 12, 2013 at 11:33 am
They want your credit card information to process an order that's free. Sorry, that's not going toRead More happen. Call me paranoid, but is that just an oversight or is it their way of tracking their customer's buying habits? I like my privacy, how about you?
Tim Chafee March 30, 2013 at 12:27 pm
Oh yeah! Like I need advise from the Hollywood dung elite like Bill Maher and Danny D'Midget toRead More offer me diet suggestions. If you don't like the product, don't buy it.
E Vorsatz March 18, 2013 at 11:08 pm
Yes, we are well aware of this & can not believe the Burlingame district is proceeding with theRead More plans for this school. The footprint of the school does not allow for safe drop off and pick up. I have seen a couple of different plans for the drop off line & none of them are adequate for the location. The traffic will surely be a nightmare & I hope we are not moved to this school, as there is not proper access for drop off. Also, not sure why the plans keep changing, maybe because they can not come up with a good plan.
Reid Kowallis April 22, 2013 at 07:01 pm
Who will respond to emergencies at Hoover School? I measured the width of the two small bridgesRead More near the bottom of Canyon Road today. One is 17’ 10” and the other is 18’. Emergency response vehicles are 10’ wide, landscape pickup trucks are 8 feet wide and SUVs are 7’ feet wide. Consider what will happen every school day when children are dropped off at school. Traffic will stop on these two bridges and no emergency vehicles will be able to pass. This will happen every school day, twice a day even when there isn’t an emergency. Consider what will happen during any real emergency. The school is located near the San Andreas Fault. Two 30” high pressure gas mains are even closer. The fire department plans to close the fire house on Hillside near the Hoover School. Who will respond to emergencies at Hoover School? How will responders get to the school?
Reid Kowallis April 22, 2013 at 06:34 pm
Has anyone read the safety/disaster plan for Hoover School? The fire department admitted that theyRead More did not take Hoover School into account in the EXPENSIVE consolidation study they commissioned. On April 9th, 2013 I attended a Burlingame City meeting on fire department consolidation . The fire department has paid for a study that recommends closing the fire house on Hillside. They plan to build a new station near Trousdale on Skyline in close proximity to two 30” high pressure gas mains (http://www.pge.com/myhome/edusafety/systemworks/gas/transmissionpipelines/) and within half a mile of the San Andreas Fault.