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My mom just bought me some vanilla beans from Tahiti and said that the person she bought them from suggested using rum to make an extract. What type of rum should be used, white or dark rum, and is there a certain alcohol content that is needed to keep the extract stable and safe at room temperature?

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    I have absolutely no expertise in this area so that's why i'm not making this an answer but I would actually lean towards a high proof, very neutral vodka but that's my choice. If your sold on rum I would stick with white so you avoid muddying the vanilla flavor with the molasses notes of dark rum.
    – Brendan
    Feb 2, 2013 at 3:39
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    You can use any type of booze you like, as long as it is at least 80 proof (well, you probably don't want to use slivovitz or smoky Scotch). If it's at least 80 proof it won't go bad, and as long as it's not the cheapest rotgut, it should be fine. I don't use sugar at all. I have liked the result of using both vodka and rum, but the resulting flavors are somewhat different.
    – user5561
    Feb 6, 2013 at 6:24
  • I use vodka so no flavors are added to the vanilla. May 14, 2020 at 14:15

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I've been making rum-based vanilla extract successfully at home for years. Here are my recommendations. Your basic ingredients are 80 proof rum, sugar and vanilla beans. At the recommended proportions, the rum and sugar are plenty effective preservatives.

You can use either light or dark rum, but it should be a good "call" 80 proof rum and not a bargain bottom shelf rum. I most often use Ron Rico. If you use a golden rum, your extract will have a warmer taste suitable for spicy treats such as pumpkin pie or spice cookies. If you use a silver rum, your vanilla will have a purer taste suitable for whipped cream or custard sauces. I get rum that is bottled in glass, because I think plastic imparts an off flavor.

Your basic recipe will use a fifth less about a 1/2 cup of rum, four vanilla beans and 1/2 cup of organic sugar. We'll go through that first, and then talk about variations.

Place your vanilla beans on a clean, flat cutting surface. Using a small, sharp knife, cut them first in 1/2 crosswise at the middle. Then take each 1/2 bean and insert the knife tip just 1/2 to an inch below the uncut end and carefully slice lengthwise to the send. Repeat this process gently and carefully on each piece unti each piece has four lengthwise quarters attached at the uncut end. Some recipes will tell you to scrape some or all of the paste out of the beans, but this is not necessary. The simply split beans will infuse the rum just fine.

Pour out about a cup of rum from your fifth and set aside. Put your sliced vanilla beans into the rum. Use a funnel to add 1/2 cup of organic sugar. Use the reserved rum you set aside to top the bottle back up. Recap the bottle and give it about 20 shakes to encourage the sugar to dissolve. Set aside in a dark cabinet or pantry. Take it out and give it a few shakes every week or so. Your vanilla will be usable but not fully extracted in about two months. It will continue to strengthen in flavor out to about 6 months of age.

Once you are satisfied with your extract, you can decant some and bottle it up in smaller bottles. It's a very popular gift for bakers.

Once you have tried vanilla extract made this way, you will never want to go back to store-bought. The difference is indescribable.

You can vary the type of rum you use, silver or gold, and you can vary the sugar. I mostly stick with light organic sugar, because I think the taste is better. I like the combination of dark rum and brown organic sugar very well. You can also increase the sugar up to about 2/3 cup in a fifth bottle, but I wouldn't go above that. Sugar gives the extract more body and mellows the flavor.

Check out Wikipedia to learn more about the various kinds of vanilla beans available. I use the organic ones from my food coop, but different kinds can be ordered online or found at specialty food stores.

A number of cooking blogs have instructions on making extracts or tinctures of other spices. There is no reason not to create combination flavors.

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  • Once you are please with your extract, you can remove the beans. Extracted beans still have enough flavor to be worth sticking in your dry sugar canister. Feb 2, 2013 at 8:47
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    What is the purpose of adding the sugar? I don't want an infused liqueur as much as I want a vanilla extract.
    – lemontwist
    Feb 2, 2013 at 13:12
  • @lemontwist Your basic extract would use vodka; I assume the sugar here is to mellow out the rum taste a little, make it more general-purpose. Feb 2, 2013 at 15:22
  • @Yamikuronue, why couldn't a high proof rum be used in an extract instead of vodka? Why does the alcohol have to be mostly flavorless?
    – lemontwist
    Feb 2, 2013 at 15:29
  • @lemontwist It clearly does not, as evidenced by this answer. The basic recipe uses flavorless alcohol to provide solely vanilla flavor, so my suspicion is that the rum flavor may be too overbearing, and my experience is that adding sugar or sugary drinks to rum mellows the flavor, which probably lets the vanilla come through stronger. Feb 2, 2013 at 15:31
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Made 7 liters of extract with Smirnov Vodka..another liter with Barbados white rum...the rum extract is a much better product. Going to order another 2 pounds of extract grade vanilla beans from "vanilla products" on Ebay and make another 16 liters, 8 with dark Barbados rum and another 8 with white Barbados rum....the rum imparts a sweetness to the extract with no need to add any extra sugar. I sell mine in 8 ounce bottles for $24.00 per bottle and can't keep enough on hand. Only two ingredients, vanilla beans and either Vodka, white rum or dark rum...no propylene glycol, no sugar no water..this stuff pretty much sells itself. Thinking of tweaking the prices upwards on the rum extract as it is a much better product than the Vodka. I don't use sugar in the Vodka either.

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I lived in Tahiti (Moorea) for 15 years and baked as a profession. Needless to say I made vanilla extract all the time. I used 16 oz of dark rum, NO SUGAR, put in maybe 8 whole vanilla beans, the more vanilla beans the more I stuffed into my rum. wait a few months and voila vanilla extract. I would some times take a whole bean out of the jar, cut it open and put the bean in the coffee pot before I made coffee, not where you put the water but in the coffee pot. Yum. I am not a vanilla fan at all. but do like fresh rum soaked vanilla bean in a pot of coffee.

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I made a batch of vanilla using Jamaican Rum and Madagascar beans (purely because I hate vodka in general) NO SUGAR whatsoever and it was beyond amazing; rich, creamy, perfectly sweet. After a couple months of soaking I ended up scraping the beans out into the bottle to use within recipes since I make Creme Brûlée a lot and having the beans in it tastes so much better. I am actually waiting on more beans to make another batch to give away at Christmas time 😍

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I adequate a batch today with a 5th of Smirnoff vanilla infused vodka and 3 Tbls of Meyers rum and 6 vanilla beans (I scrappedal the seeds into the bottle before adding the bean pods) as it gives better results for custards and cakes later. I added a little simple syrup for body. Now the wait of approx 4 months till I can use and gift it.

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  • Sorry for typos from auto speller
    – Norma
    Feb 28, 2015 at 20:19
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    You can fix the typos by clicking on the word "edit" just below your post.
    – Ross Ridge
    Feb 28, 2015 at 21:32
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We make vanilla extract all the time at home and gift it to our friends and family for the holidays. Personal we like rum and even brandy, but the classic vodka works just fine. We have tried a variety of beans Madagascar, Uganda and Tahitian but currently we really favor the bold cherry and smokey tones of an Indonesian Tahitian bean sold from a company online at www.slofoodgroup.com I am sure you can probably get great beans anywhere but we liked there variety as we have been making vanilla extract for years.

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