"Grade A" sounds like the obvious choice — it's right there in the name. But buyers who choose beans purely on letter grade are often overpaying for characteristics they don't actually need, or missing the grade that would have delivered more flavour for less money. The grading system isn't a quality ranking. It's a sorting system by moisture and length, and understanding the difference changes what you should actually order.
Grade A, B, and C vanilla beans aren't better or worse than each other — they're suited to different jobs. Grade A is for direct use and presentation. Grade B is for extraction, where it often delivers more vanillin per dollar. Grade C is for industrial-scale infusion. The "best" grade is the one that matches your application.
The Three Grades, Explained Properly
Grade A — Gourmet / Prime
Grade A beans are the premium tier by appearance: 15cm or longer, 30–35% moisture, visually lustrous and pliable enough to bend without cracking. These are the beans for direct use — scraping seeds into custards, infusing into syrups, or showcasing whole in pastry presentation. Price per kilogram is highest in this category, and that price is largely paying for moisture and visual perfection, not necessarily for more vanillin.
Grade B — Extract Grade
Grade B beans are shorter (under 15cm) and drier (moisture under 25%). Because vanillin concentrates as moisture drops, Grade B often contains a higher percentage of vanillin by dry weight than Grade A from the same origin — meaning a kilogram of Grade B can deliver more actual flavour compound than a kilogram of Grade A, at a fraction of the price. For extraction, infusion, and any application where the beans won't be seen, Grade B is frequently the smarter buy, not the compromise one.
Grade C — Cuts & Splits
Imperfect in appearance but not in flavour. Grade C beans are split, cut, or blemished during harvest or curing — cosmetic issues that have no bearing on aromatic quality. Their high surface area actually makes them extract faster than whole pods. Ideal for industrial extraction or large-batch infusions where visual perfection is irrelevant and cost efficiency matters most.
Which Grade Should You Actually Buy?
| Grade | Length | Moisture | Best For | Price Tier |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Grade A | 15cm+ | 30-35% | Direct use, pastry, visible presentation | Highest |
| Grade B | Under 15cm | Under 25% | Extract, syrups, infusions | Mid |
| Grade C | Cuts & splits | Variable | Industrial extraction, bulk infusion | Lowest |
At Farm to Vanilla, we're committed to transparent grading. Every shipment comes with a detailed certificate of analysis including moisture content, vanillin percentage, and origin farm data. We believe buyers deserve to know exactly what they're getting — and to choose the grade that actually fits what they're making, not just the one with the highest letter.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Grade A vanilla always the best choice?
No. Grade A is the best choice when appearance and moisture matter — direct use in custards, syrups, or presentation. For extract or infusion, where the pod itself is discarded after processing, Grade B often delivers more vanillin per dollar spent.
Does a lower grade mean lower flavour quality?
Not necessarily. Grading is based primarily on moisture content and physical appearance, not aromatic compound concentration. Grade C beans, despite looking imperfect, can extract just as much — or more — flavour as Grade A in the right application.
Why is Grade B often cheaper but higher in vanillin?
Lower moisture content concentrates the existing vanillin within the bean, so a kilogram of drier Grade B beans can contain more vanillin by dry weight than a kilogram of higher-moisture Grade A beans, even though Grade B costs less per kilogram.