While natural vanilla is the second most expensive spice in the world, with Grade A pods costing around $50 per 100g, often more, artificial vanilla extract offers a cost-effective alternative without compromising quality. Natural vanilla beans contain 1.2% to 2.5% vanillin content, which represents 65% to 85% of the vanilla bean flavour. At the same time, artificial variants can be crafted to precise specifications at a fraction of the cost - as low as $0.10 per gram of vanillin compared to $25 per gram from natural sources.
Vanillin
As noted above, this is the compound that gives vanilla its flavour and vanillin is chemically identical to the compound found in vanilla pods. It is naturally occuring in dozens of plants worldwide.
Ethyl Vanillin
This compound finds wide use in the industry due to its strong vanilla aroma, estimated to be 3X as aromatic as vanillin. Some artificial extracts are made solely from this compound. It is a compound that has not yet been found in nature.
Veratraldehyde
You may see a compound that goes by this name, and it is sometimes called Methyl Vanillin and sits between ethyl vanillin and plain vanillin. It is less used today because ethyl vanillin has a much stronger flavour and is more economical, but Veratraldehyde is softer and more powdery, so you may find it useful to make something unique. It is a compound found in nature.
Natural vanilla's complex profile consists of multiple additional compounds, with vanillin being the dominant component but you can enhance the flavour by working in various other compounds.
4-Hydroxybenzaldehyde: Contributes woody, floral notes
Guaiacol: Provides smoky, phenolic depth.
Eugenol: Adds spicy, clove-like warmth
Anisyl Alcohol: Creates sweet, floral notes, more Tahiti-type vanilla
Methyl Cinnamate: Offers fruity, balsamic qualities
An artificial vanilla extract can be created using the following formulation (for 1000mL of double strength vanilla:
9.0g Vanillin (Core vanilla flavor)
2.0g Ethyl Vanillin (Intensity booster)
2.0g Dihydrocoumarin (Depth)
0.2g Guaiacol (Smoky authenticity)
0.2g Heliotropin (Floral notes)
500 mL Vodka (Solvent base)
400 mL Water (Dilution)
100 mL Glycerin (Texture)
This enhanced artificial vanilla extract formulation provides superior flavor at approximately $0.64 per ounce, making it an economically viable option for both home and commercial use. The formula can be adjusted and customized by adding optional components like oak wood extract, rum extract, or additional aromatic compounds to create unique flavor profiles.
This artificial vanilla extract is particularly well-suited for baking, beverages, and general culinary applications. The carefully balanced combination of compounds creates a rich, complex vanilla flavor that rivals natural vanilla extract while maintaining consistency and cost-effectiveness.
Military grade "synthetic vanilla" is a great starting point for understanding good artificial vanilla. This would be considered a double strength, or 2-fold, extract. This just means it has twice the vanillin as a standard extract. This makes sense since it reduces bulk, which is important for military applications. For most recipes, you would simply use half the amount.
The next recipe is from US patent 5,874,398 Ethylvanillin Isobutyrate, a compound related to ethyl vanillin, but slightly different. The patent provides a basic recipe and then recommends adding 200 to 100 parts of ethylvanillin isobutyrate (EVIB) to the recipe or replacing the ethylvanillin with EVIB.
Please note that this formula is a vanilla concentrate as the vanillin content is 20% of the formula, and typically, it is around 2%. To use this formula, you would take 100 mL of the concentrate and add 900 mL of alcohol/water (or glycerin or propylene glycol) to make 1000 mL of artificial extract. The benefit of these concentrates is that they get better as they age.
The final formula comes from Patent 3,960,860 and incorporates Popcorn Pyrimidine (1,2 Benzodihydropyrone), which is slightly different than Popcorn Pyrazine (2-acetyl pyrazine) that we used in the Cake Flavour video. You will get reasonable results if you swap 2-acetyl pyrazine for the pyrimidine.
It should be noted that this formula is also a concentrate, so to make a normal concentration, just dilute this formula to 1000 mL using your preferred solvent. The ethyl vanillin content is higher, so this may also come across as a 2-fold formula when diluted.
Darcy S. O'Neil
2025-03-27 22:45:06 +0000 UTCEthan Callender
2025-03-27 21:20:28 +0000 UTCEmmanuel Isunza
2025-03-19 08:45:55 +0000 UTCPeter Grätz
2025-03-19 08:16:54 +0000 UTC