How To Make Instant Pot Vanilla Extract (2024)

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Meghan Splawn

Meghan Splawn

Meghan was the Food Editor for Kitchn's Skills content. She's a master of everyday baking, family cooking, and harnessing good light. Meghan approaches food with an eye towards budgeting — both time and money — and having fun. Meghan has a baking and pastry degree, and spent the first 10 years of her career as part of Alton Brown's culinary team. She co-hosts a weekly podcast about food and family called Didn't I Just Feed You.

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updated Oct 18, 2019

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How To Make Instant Pot Vanilla Extract (1)

Use your Instant Pot to make better homemade vanilla extract, faster.

Makes6 cups vanilla extract

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Here’s something that’s going to change your home cooking life: You can make better vanilla extract at home in about an hour using the Instant Pot. Yes, one hour! If your mind isn’t blown yet, consider this: The Instant Pot will also give your homemade vanilla extract the intensity of aged homemade extract or high-quality store-bought vanilla. This vanilla extract is sweet and heady with a rich perfume and is only a few jars and an electric pressure away. It’s the perfect last-minute gift for the baker in your life, or a game-changing ingredient for your holiday baking. Here’s how to make this magic in the kitchen.

Why Make Vanilla Extract in the Instant Pot?

Homemade vanilla extract is made by plunking vanilla beans into alcohol and letting the two infuse for at least a month (and as long as a year) before infusion is complete.

An electric pressure cooker uses pressure to rapidly heat the alcohol to a boil under pressure and infuse the vanilla almost instantly. You can definitely boil your alcohol on the stovetop for infusions, but you’ll lose about 40 percent of your alcohol to evaporation, stinking up the whole house in the process. With pressure infusion, the vodka and vanilla beans are housed inside canning jars within the electric pressure cooker, preventing evaporation and alcohol vapor from escaping.

Buying Vanilla Beans for Instant Pot Extract

Vanilla beans can be quite costly, especially if you’re hoping to buy more than a few and can only get them at the grocery store. Luckily, Grade B vanilla beans are best for extract and are less expensive than their Grade A counterparts. Buying your vanilla beans online will also cut costs. I like to buy my extract beans in bulk via eBay, but here are a few other fine sources to check out.

The Best Alcohol to Use for Vanilla Extract in the Instant Pot

You can use almost any alcohol for extract, but vodka’s a good choice for homemade vanilla extract because it’s plentiful and inexpensive. I often use bourbon for extract, as it adds a smoky aroma to the finished vanilla. Overall, you’ve got options, so choose a mid-priced bottle that you wouldn’t mind drinking as a co*cktail for any alcohol you choose.

More Resources and Advice

In case the idea of making vanilla extract under pressure makes you feel nervous, here are some wonderful resources for recipes and research that has been done on this and similar methods.

The Benefits and Precautions of Using Canning Jars

A quick internet search will show you that electric pressure cooker recipes for vanilla extract vary in the procedures, with some pouring the liquid right into the insert pot and other pressure steaming the extract in jars. Testing both, I found that the jarred version (despite my concerns about jars inside the pressure cooker) was best.

Pouring the vodka directly into the pressure cooker with the beans gave off a heady perfume of alcohol that became sort of noxious during the cooking and cooling phases, and because I don’t have an extra insert for my Instant Pot, the resulting extract had an aromatic back note of caramelized onions (or was that the chili I made last week?). Containing the extract within the jars inside the pressure cooker while pressure steaming made for a cleaner extract with less aroma while cooking.

Let’s Play Safe!

  • You should never make extract in a stovetop pressure cooker — open flames around alcohol under pressure is potential very dangerous.
  • Don’t leave your pressure cooker completely unattended while under pressure. Use the hour to work elsewhere in the house or kitchen, but not to run to the grocery store.
  • Even after an hour of natural release, the jars and alcohol will still be extremely hot. Use caution when removing them from the Instant Pot and cool completely at room temperature before opening the jars or using.

Using and Storing Your Pressure Cooker Vanilla Extract

You can use your extract within as little as 24 hours, but you can also store the extract as it gets stronger within a week. Store in a cool, dark place. Feel free to move the extract from the canning jars to more decorative jars for gifting.

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Comments

Use your Instant Pot to make better homemade vanilla extract, faster.

Makes 6 cups vanilla extract

Nutritional Info

Ingredients

  • 6

    vanilla beans, preferably grade B

  • 6 cups

    vodka, preferably mid-priced 80% proof, such as Smirnoff or Tito's

  • 1 cup

    water

Equipment

  • Electric pressure cooker with trivet or steamer insert

  • 3

    (16-ounce) canning jars with lids

  • Tongs

  • Measuring cup

  • Paring knife

Instructions

  1. Split the vanilla beans. Use the tip of a paring knife to split each vanilla bean in two lengthwise.

  2. Divide the vanilla beans and vodka between 3 jars. Divide the split beans among 3 (16-ounce) canning jars. Add 2 cups of vodka into each jar and make sure the beans are completely covered in vodka.

  3. Seal the jars and add to the Instant Pot. Place the lids on the jars and seal finger tight. Set the Instant Pot's trivet in the bottom of the insert. Place the jars on the trivet with equal space around them.

  4. Add the water to the Instant Pot, seal, and cook on high pressure for 60 minutes. Add the water to the Instant Pot and seal the pot. Use manual mode to cook the jars for 1 hour at high pressure. When the cook time is up, don't do a thing — allow the pot to naturally release its pressure for at least 1 hour or longer.

  5. Remove the jars of extract from the pressure cooker and cool completely. Use tongs to transfer the jars to a kitchen towel or cooling rack to cool completely before storing.

  6. Extract is ready to use immediately. You can use your extract within as little as 24 hours, but you can also wait, as it gets stronger within a week. Store in a cool, dark place. Feel free to move the extract from the canning jars to more decorative jars or bottles for gifting.

Recipe Notes

Storage: Vanilla extract kept in airtight containers at cool room temperature can be kept indefinitely.

Filed in:

Cooking Methods

Dairy-Free

easy

Gluten-Free

How To

Instant Pot

How To Make Instant Pot Vanilla Extract (2024)

FAQs

What is the best way to make homemade vanilla extract? ›

You only need 2 ingredients for homemade vanilla extract: vanilla beans and vodka. Let the vanilla beans infuse the vodka for as little as 8 weeks, but for optimal flavor, wait at least 6-12 months before using. Homemade vanilla is more cost efficient than store-bought options. You can try homemade vanilla sugar too.

Can you speed up making vanilla extract? ›

Splitting the beans exposes the seeds to the alcohol and speeds extraction but avoids the funky flavors introduced when chopping up the pods. Splitting was so effective that the extract didn't even need to circulate for a full 24 hours—just 18 was enough for the extract to taste sufficiently vanilla infused.

What is the best alcohol to make vanilla extract? ›

Choosing an Alcohol
  • Vodka will give you the smoothest, purest, most unadulterated and well-balanced vanilla flavor and is my preference.
  • Grain alcohol has more of a bite to it and typically pulls the flavor from the beans faster than vodka. ...
  • Bourbon will yield a smooth, warm extract with caramel undertones.
Sep 19, 2023

What is the ratio for making vanilla extract? ›

Just remember this ratio: 6 vanilla beans per 8 ounces of alcohol. So if your jar is 12 ounces, use 9 vanilla beans. If it's 16 ounces, use 12 beans. Pour your alcohol of choice on top.

Is it worth making your own vanilla extract? ›

A bit of simple math reveals that homemade vanilla extract is the more economical choice. Say you buy two 4-ounce bottles of the good vanilla extract from the grocery store every year. If each jar costs $18, that's $180 over a five-year span.

How long will homemade vanilla extract last? ›

When stored properly, vanilla extract will keep indefinitely, but using it within five years will allow for best flavor and aroma. Do not refrigerate or freeze, even after opening. What is the shelf life of my vanilla beans? When stored properly, two years.

How many vanilla beans per 8 oz of vodka? ›

For best flavor you'll want 4-5 vanilla beans for every 8 ounces (1 cup) of vodka. The quality of the vanilla beans is more important than the quality of the alcohol, so you don't need to buy an expensive bottle. Alcohol: 80 proof Vodka, (or brandy, rum, or bourbon, if preferred, for different flavor).

Does homemade vanilla need to be strained? ›

If you'd like to skip straining altogether, you can simply remove the bean from the jar. Don't toss out that precious vanilla bean, though! Dry it off and save it for when you're ready to make vanilla sugar, another enticing vanilla product you can make at home.

Why is vanilla so hard to produce? ›

In the hilly forests of Madagascar, in the Indian Ocean, where 80 per cent of vanilla orchids are grown, farmers battle cyclones, deforestation, exploitation, and theft – all of which cause supply shortages, and price surges, and can force worried farmers into picking the plant before it is ripe – which lowers its ...

Is homemade vanilla better with vodka or rum? ›

With Vodka, you get the taste of the pure vanilla bean, as the alcohol is completely tasteless. With Rum, you get a very sweet taste and the maximum vanilla taste. With Bourbon, while you do get a wonderfully enhanced vanilla taste, there are specific smoky notes that emanate through the extract.

Can I reuse vanilla beans after making extract? ›

Beans you've already used in a batch of extract can be reused in the next batch. When I siphoned off the vanilla extract from my 18 month batch, almost all of those beans went right back into the jar for the next batch. I simply added a few new beans to punch up the flavour.

Does homemade vanilla extract still have alcohol? ›

Is There Alcohol in Vanilla Extract? By definition, yes there is alcohol in vanilla extract. According to the FDA, vanilla extract is a mixture of vanilla scent and flavor characteristic, and alcohol. To be exact, the FDA requires an ethyl alcohol content of at least 35% for a product to be considered vanilla extract.

How many vanilla beans does it take to make a gallon of vanilla extract? ›

FDA standards call for at least 13.35 ounces of vanilla beans per gallon of liquid. This equates to approximately . 9 oz of beans per 8 ounces of alcohol! Many people really like to use rum, bourbon, or brandy.

Do you cut vanilla beans for extract? ›

There are two primary reasons to cut the beans:
  1. When you are making extract, you want the bean fully submerged in alcohol. Some beans are simply too big for the bottle and need to be cut.
  2. Extract making takes a long time. Cutting the bean may decrease the time it takes for your extracts to be ready.

How dark should homemade vanilla extract be? ›

Don't be fooled by extracts that claim to be pure, imitation and clear vanilla utilize artificial flavors. Pure vanilla extract should be dark brown; the color of Vanilla Beans used in the extraction process.

Is homemade vanilla extract better with bourbon or vodka? ›

With Vodka, you get the taste of the pure vanilla bean, as the alcohol is completely tasteless. With Rum, you get a very sweet taste and the maximum vanilla taste. With Bourbon, while you do get a wonderfully enhanced vanilla taste, there are specific smoky notes that emanate through the extract.

How many times can you reuse vanilla beans to make extract? ›

Re-fillable: Once you run out of vanilla, refill the bottle with Vodka and use the beans for another batch (they will last for up to two batches). Also, the vanilla extract wont expire as long as it's stored in a cool, dry place.

What is the best form of vanilla extract for baking? ›

If you're baking, imitation vanilla extract is a great substitute for pure vanilla extract. However, if you're making icing, pudding, creams, or a no-bake dessert, artificial vanilla can sometimes have a bitter aftertaste, so experts recommend sticking to pure vanilla extract.

What is the best jar for homemade vanilla extract? ›

Container: You can use any glass container you would like that has a lid. I like to use pint-sized mason jars with plastic lids. Waxed Paper: A piece placed between the lid and the jar helps to keep the extract from leaking when you shake the jar. It also helps to create a better seal.

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