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General · July 8, 2026

How to Make Vanilla Extract at Home

By Farm to Vanilla Team

Real vanilla extract is one part farming and nine parts patience. There is no cooking, no equipment beyond a jar, and no skill required — just the right ratio and enough time for the alcohol to pull out what the bean has to offer.
5:8
Beans-to-alcohol ratio (beans per 8 fl oz / ~240ml) for FDA-strength extract
8–12 wks
Minimum steeping time for usable extract
Indefinite
Shelf life once properly steeped — it only improves with age

What You Actually Need


Basic Shopping List
Vanilla beans5 beans per 8 fl oz alcohol
GradeGrade B extract-grade is ideal (see our grading guide)
Alcohol80–100 proof, neutral or flavor-complementary
ContainerGlass jar or bottle with a tight seal
EquipmentA knife and a dark storage spot — nothing else

Step by Step


STEP 1

Split the beans lengthwise

Using a sharp knife, slice each bean lengthwise, leaving about half an inch intact at one end so the pod stays in one piece. This exposes the seeds and interior surface to the alcohol without turning the jar into a mess of loose specks.

STEP 2

Submerge fully in alcohol

Drop the split beans into your jar and cover completely with alcohol. Any bean left partially exposed to air risks mold, so top up if needed until everything is submerged.

STEP 3

Seal and store somewhere dark

Light degrades flavor compounds over time, so a pantry or cupboard works better than a sunny counter. Temperature does not need to be precise — room temperature is fine.

STEP 4

Shake weekly and wait

Give the jar a gentle shake once a week to keep extraction even. At the 8-week mark you will have usable extract; most people find 6 months produces a noticeably richer, rounder result, and there is no real upper limit — extract only deepens with age.

STEP 5

Strain, or don't

Straining out the pods is optional. Many home bakers leave the spent beans in the bottle indefinitely, topping up with fresh alcohol as they use extract, which keeps a "perpetual" batch running for years.

Choosing Your Alcohol


AlcoholFlavor ResultBest For
VodkaClean, neutral, lets pure vanilla character shineGeneral baking, custards, whipped cream
BourbonAdds caramel, oak, and warm spice notesCookies, pies, glazes, cocktails
Dark rumAdds molasses and tropical depthFruitcakes, rum-based desserts
BrandyFruity, slightly sweet undertoneFine pastry, custards, poached fruit

Common Mistakes


Avoid

  • Using low-proof alcohol under 70 proof, which under-extracts flavor compounds
  • Leaving beans partially exposed above the liquid line
  • Judging readiness by color alone — extract darkens quickly but flavor takes longer to develop
  • Buying beans so cheap they turn out under-cured or over-dried

Do Instead

  • Start with proper Grade B beans meant for extraction, not display-grade Grade A
  • Label the jar with the start date so you know exactly how long it has steeped
  • Taste-test at 8 weeks, then again at 6 months, to learn your own preference
  • Keep a "mother jar" going indefinitely by topping up spent pods with fresh alcohol
Good to Know

Homemade extract does not need to hit the FDA's commercial "pure vanilla extract" concentration standard to taste excellent in your own kitchen — that standard exists for products sold at retail. For personal use, more beans and more time simply means a stronger result.

How many beans do I need for a standard 8oz bottle?
Five split beans per 8 fluid ounces of alcohol matches the concentration the FDA requires for commercially labeled "pure vanilla extract." You can use fewer for a lighter result or more for a stronger one, since there is no legal requirement for personal-use extract.
Does homemade vanilla extract go bad?
No. The alcohol content acts as a preservative, so properly made extract stored in a sealed container has an effectively indefinite shelf life and generally improves in flavor over the first year.
Can I reuse the spent vanilla pods?
Yes. Many people keep spent pods in the jar and simply top up with fresh alcohol as extract is used, effectively running a continuous batch. Spent pods can also be dried and ground into vanilla sugar rather than discarded.
Sources & Further Reading
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