Madagascar, Mexican, French vanilla? Tasting 5 types of vanilla beans
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- Опубликовано: 6 окт 2024
- Beyond Mexico and Madagascar, what are the differences in flavor of vanilla varieties?
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Great video for the vanilla lovers...as a Vanilla producer I would love to add what sort of taste and aroma that Ceylon Vanilla beans have. I know Sri Lanka is not famous for Vanilla due to lack of awareness.. but most customers said we got Strong earthy, sweets Vanilla aroma. Also, behind Vanilla you will notice Cocoa scent, hit of resins and dates. This is due to processing of Vanilla beans using traditional curing methods in high altitude climate conditions...if anyone interest
Do you have a website I can see what you have?
80 or 90 % of ''vanilla'' products you see in your local favourite supermarkt, do not contain any vanilla.
I love your voice and how you never blink. Thank you for not wasting time with useless info and intro's. Please keep at it. I hope your channel gets bigger. Subscribed!
2:10
0:52 he blinked
ngl I was having a staring contest with him
I was a vanilla farmer from Kerala, India
Why this channel isn't far more popular is honestly beyond me. Really high quality content here
This is the best video you've done on vanilla. From the video framing to overlays to speeded up scenes. Nice work!
A friend of mine brought a few reject beans to the usa from her uncle's vanilla farm-the fragrance was soooo complex and definitely had some floral notes and lemme tell you- if i could grow just one, it would be that one, but im also a fragrance snob. most people think its inferior, but most people don't have the olfactory capacity to detect just how complex tahitensis is.
I wish I could make my whole house smell like this.
I’m a snob as well, but for flavor, and the best vanilla for baking, hands down, has to be Madagascar, but I agree that Tahitian has the best smell out of all the vanillas, and is a close second to Madagascar for me, but I prefer it in lighter desserts like ice cream, different types of custards (ie pana cotta, creme brûlée, etc), and frostings because baking with it, or using it with other flavors that can drown out it’s original flavor instead of letting it be the main flavor is just criminal. The other vanillas are good for specialty desserts, but in general Madagascar is great for baking and flavoring, and Tahitian is perfect for delicate desserts that let it be the star of the show.
This guy is really good at packing loads useful information into a sort cast. Thanks; I learned stuff.
You should make the vanilla extract with alcohol since many of the aromatic components are only carried away in alcohol.
I could have made egg nog!
I'm going to get a bottle of coconut rum and throw every different kind of vanilla bean I can find into it.
I did it. blended it in a Ninja a bit and yummmm! Tahitian makes the absolutely most delicious sugar.
👏👏👏👏
@@lavvy2585 what is Tahitian every time I try to look it up I can only find the sugar scrub one :(
@@Vickyyy- Tahitian beans to me don't make the best extract but it certainly makes the best vanilla sugar. It smells so wonderful. Go to Amazon or Ebay and look up Tahitian vanilla beans. Make sure you always get A grade if you want to make sugar.
Wow you made me want to try Mexican vanilla. Never would've though to try it!
Well made video with great info! Good Comparative Analysis! Thanks for the video! Part1
My favorite is Ugandan vanilla followed by Tahitian vanilla. Ugandan has a super rich and potent flavor. I’ve got 16oz extracts beaning made of each and will create a blend for a third option once finished.
Thank you for the inspiration! My spouse and I are really getting into extracts and such - I'm interested in creating highly concentrated batches of each variety and blending /diluting them to create profiles balanced for different applications. Thanks for this wonderful video.
I'm getting into extracting vanilla too. I recently put Tanzania beans in rum. I just ordered some bourbon cured Madagascar beans, and Sumatra beans. I just learned that bourbon cured has nothing to do with the whiskey haha.
@@countrieboyz2009 Isn't it funny how different niche industries have totally different working definitions for words than we would normally assume? Please let me know how the rum goes!
Thank you for making this great video! I'm making vanilla extract at home and this had given me some good ideas about what to expect from the beans I bought! Awesome!
Here in the UK, vanilla beans are much cheaper if you buy them on Ebay and only cost around a £1 ($1.28) each if you buy in multiples.
Your videos are subtly drawing me in, almost giving me the visuals of the flavors when you put them into words. Very helpful in choosing which beans I will use to make homemade vanilla extract! Thank you so much for these videos, subscribed!!
Wow, this is such a smart take on vanilla. Thank you.
Thanks for sharing. Great info👍👍👍
I think the issue with this is that Madagascan Vanilla is described as "Classic" instead of making out what it actually taste like, which sets Madagascan as the Standard and measuring the others based on that. It would be better if you can come to it from a blank-slate state and just describe how you find everything. For me, Madagascan is more sweet and less pungent compared to other varieties. Indonesian is smoky and woody, and Tahitian is fruity and floraly, it's more that you taste it in your nose than in your tonge for Tahitians,
Also, Mexican and Tahitian Vanilla is two competently different plants from the one in Madagascar. Ugandan and Indonesian Vanilla are usually the same type as Madagascan. Indonesia also have the Tahitian type of Vanilla. It would be better if you can compare type by type, if you're familiar with the type, it's Planifolia for the Classic Vanilla, Tahitensis for the Tahitian varieties, and Pompona for the Mexican varieties.
Thanks, this was a really interesting and well-put together video. Colour me impressed!
I tasted the ones from Madagascar and the ones from Tahiti, not easy to form an opinion since the taste can change from one harvest to another, but the Tahitian is really impressive in terms of smell, in terms of taste it becomes more complicated to determine. I want to taste the Mexican, the original.
Salutation
Part2 : That voice and on screen characterization is spot on for a DC Marvel Comics super villain, go and audition for a role and tell them I sent you! Keep it up its interesting!
This is such an out of the box video idea and I'm absolutely loving it. Now I just gotta get me some vanilla😂
A couple of added details…. Cheap Mexican extracts are often adulterated with a different chemical. Coumarin which is actually a blood thinning drug
Tahitian vanilla has less vanillin because it is actually a slightly different plant… a cross between two species. I happen to like it after a trip to Tahiti where they sold it in fresh produce markets
I'm Vanilla Beans supplier from Indonesia.. Even for Indonesia alone, We have quite a few varieties nationwide too..
After Madagascar, Indonesia is one of the ten countries with the largest vanilla production in the world.according to the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) 2019.
kualitas kita masih kalah sama yg lain
Great video, Im glad Florida and Hawaii are growing their own vanilla now
Excellent Video, thank you!
Thanks for this man, was really fascinating!
Great info! Nice video!
Bourbon refers to the manner the beans are cured ( steamed and dried) versus Mexican cure, which is sun dried.
Thank you. I may also buy all the varieties I can find.
I'm new to vanilla
New subscriber, from your milk and vanilla bean episode. Looked at your other videos available, really like your content and variety. Will be checking out your library while looking forward to new content!
I’d love to buy direct from Madagascar
I'm the direct buyer from Madagascar
I can help you buy directly from Madagascar. What quantities would you be interested in?
Thank you for putting the time and effort into this video!
thank you ! God bless you ! 😊
You’re so handsome, dude! I really loved your delivery. Thanks for the cool video. Vanilla is so freakin delicious 🙌🏼
Awesome video!!!
So was there any one bean you preferred overall? Oh, now I want to test them all! I make tinctures and taste that has very little bitterness is important because of other herbs I use, like ginger root and turmeric root. I loved this video by the way.
Lovely video, young man. I thoroughly enjoyed your video. Looking forward to more :)
Can you do a video on US grown vanilla? there are some companies starting to not only grow but also produce it.
Awesome video! Thank you!!!
Good video man, thanks!
Ahhhh nice one Dr Malcolm 😁
Damn, I was expecting you to cook up five slammin desserts!! lol. Still, a cool and informative video!
Cream as a base would be a nice test!!!
Great episode. Thanks
No mention of V.Pompona from Peru?
Great video, very informative, Thank you, I just liked and subscribed 😊
Definitely fun review thank u ✨💖 I enjoy vanilla
i like the floral and fruity flavours of tahitian vanilla but i find it hard to extract the flavours directly into my recipes' milk, especially compared to what some companies can do with more sophisticated extraction so i tend to use a high quality extract. even then with tahitian vanilla extracts, the vanillin flavour can still be lacking and using too much extract to compensate adds an alcoholic taste to the recipe; instead i can boost the "vanilla flavour" with some vanillin powder (pretty common in professional kitchens). its also really handy to have powder (or artificial extract) around when using vanilla in a way that would destroy its complexity or overpower it and save the good stuff for when it counts.
it might sound a bit heretical to foodies but given how scarce and resource intensive vanilla can be i think being frugal and responsible as possible in using the real stuff is a good thing
One other thing, the milk is a good choice but vanilla shines in a SWEET environment.
Fascinating! Thank you for making this! You have great content, but you also remind me of a very good friend from childhood I havent seen in years. So I thoroughly enjoyed it! My wife is a youtuber and I saw you sub count and view count and made me want to follow you even more! Subscribe and I look forward to more from you!
P.S. I am a chef, incase that makes my compliments mean more to you
The true reason vanilla beans are so expensive is greed. When severe weather damaged a large number of crops across the plaanet, prices skyrocketed. The crops have stabilized but the prices never returned to an equitable medium. One bean in a spice jar at the local wallyworld was priced at nearly $13. I did not give my rare cash for such an overpriced item. It just reminded of even the poorest wallyworld child is still among the 10 richest people. So, the point is, it is much more a shame those poor farmers are being taken. Especially by greed and arrogant consumers.
...was eating a peanut butter chocolate chip lara bar and reading the ingredients......saw.....vanilla extract.....was like.....I don't really know anything about vanilla extract.....videos are as follows: random YT shorts about making it at home, Business Insider: Vanilla is the 2nd most expensive spice..., PBS Hawaii: Making Vanilla on the North Shore of Oahu, and yours.....not sure how many more I will watch.... thanks for sharing 👋🏼
It’s worth the price for
1 bean when making homemade vanilla ice cream.
Can I grind these up in my blender when I make my homemade almond milk? So far I've only used extract but I was wondering if I could use the entire bean instead. I have a powerful blender so they would be cut into very small pieces. Your thoughts?
Can't compare since these are different varieties, Planifolia and Tahitensis, as well as different terroirs, among them some are volcanic soils, some aren't.
It's also complet different refining methods leading to completely different results in matters of aromas and flavours since some will be fresh (still alive and continously bonifying with age), some will be frosted (full of crystallised Vanilline), and the standard ones will be just be dry like most of Planifolia in Madagascar, Uganda, Togo, Tanzania, Indonesia and PNG which are scalded (boiled), while in the Caribbean we scarify our vanilla beans, and in Polynesia they harvest the vanilla beans fully mature already on the vines.
So It's like if you were trying to compare Saint-Emilion wine with "Baume de Venise" and "la veuve cliquot", No sense.
Also milk tests won't extract all components and you lack the most interesting of vanilla complex flavours and aromas.
French vanilla of course refers to vanilla beans from agroforestry culture in French territories, related terroirs and IGP: Planifolia from la Réunion, Mayotte, Seychelles, Mauritius, the Pompona and Planifolia vanilla from Guadeloupe, Martinique, New Caledonia, as well the Tahitensis from French Polynesia, Tahiti, Moorea, Taha'a, Huahine,.... Here are some more informations about the Fédération of French Vanilla conference-vanille.com/conference-2023/ which you can google translate. Also in French vanilla bean is named a "gousse" and not a bean, since in French a bean is a "haricot". And "Bourbon" is an old appelation which protect specific terroirs of vanilla beans, not necessarily French actually, namely Réunion, Mayotte, Mauritius, Comores, Seychelles and Madagascar, and one specific curing method which is to boil the green beans. This is what "Bourbon" vanilla means, and its origin comes from la Réunion Island which was named Bourbon island after the french royal family Bourbon and is where vanilla vines were first introduced, studied and its hand pollination with beans boiling processes created to cure big volume faster.
And last but not least there is absolutely no comparison between bulk (or commodity) greenhouses-grown vanilla beans stored in warehouses, (one standardised monoculture of planifolia variety only that American market focus on and receive) and agroforestry vanilla beans (specialty Vanilla beans producing more than hundreds different varieties, sub-varieties and hybrids) which is what we, French, are looking for to cultivate, to cook and create culinary specialities with.
Better refer to organic vanilla farmers themselves when you wish to learn everything about Vanilla Beans. And when it comes to cooking with vanilla, also better rely on a real professional chef(fe) who actually cook with vanilla beans.
Sylvanilla is one you can rely on for certified varieties and origins of vanilla beans from agroforestry, as well as for actual vanilla related studies and publications.
www.sylvanilla.ch
NICE FILM!
Always go with the Madagascar
Just a suggestion, but make a "Creme Brulee'" out of all of them.
7:18 Tahiti is part of France though.
Coming in 3 years late but, what if you mixed them all together?
Great stuff thanks
Is it possible to make extract from the pompona?
There is aktualley vanilla grown in france in la reunion
BEANS CAN RANGET TO >$500 PER KILO. IT IS CRAZY JUDGED FOR QULAITY/FLAVOR & MARKET DEMAND & SUPPLY.
I'm from Indonesia and I have a lot of vanilla that I can't sell. Do you know where I can sell vanilla
What kind of milk did you use?
2% which is a chemical shit-show with no milk actually existing.
Whole milk which is milk.
Cream which would have made the most sense since it has the highest percentage of fat.
Amazing voice!
Basically French vanilla is the combination of vanilla and hazelnut
Considering everything from nature or the creator specifically is created in abundance. I can’t help thinking that some people keep it all to themselves and lie to us saying that it is not in abundance ... 🤔!
Thanks for the explanation though 🎉
What is it that makes you think everything is created in abundance? If something can only be grown in a few areas of the world, it would make sense that there would be a limited amount. I guess it depends on how you define abundance.
Mexican Vanilla is the original and the very best!! 🫶🏻🙌🏻🍦
Would it help to grind the seeds.?
The seeds don't contain flavor compounds. The "goo" around them does.
Take a day or at least a few hours in between testing
You maybe interested in joining via zoom the Vanilla 2021 Symposium Nov. 9 & 10. Experts in this field will share global issues that vanilla growers face.
Like they could even compete for real please
LOL Beans can be had for as little as $9 an ounce. They are NOT that expensive.
Wow cool. Instant sub!
5:16 the word you’re looking for is UMAMI YOU CLASSLESS DEGEN!!! /s
Hello friend where would I find today kilo price any source I can get That info .. I’m a small farmer
Search on Facebook for groups for vanilla buyers and sellers.
Do you blink?
Beans and Mexican….. f yes and rice plus tacos
You forgot Australian 🇦🇺
Of Mexican for me
I love tahitian vanilla 🏝️🤙
MALAYSIAN 👍
Thank you for the milk tasting, that tells me a lot, cheers from communist CANADA.
Tahiti and Réunion belong to France so technically it is french vanilla...
politically perhaps, but Tahitian vanilla is sold because it is Tahitian not because it is French, it is Tahitians who developed the sector, no one else. It's part of their agricultural and natural heritage which makes them known on a global scale and they are proud, we can at least leave it to them, right ?
Vanilla are from Mexico then...
You need the video abruptly
Please dont take offense to this. I really like the information in your videos, however when you speak into the camera, i find your lack of blinking and sanpaku eyes very unsettling and uncomfortable to watch, and it such that it distracts from the quality of your content. My suggestion is to use a voice over or if you want to be on camera, hire a body language coach to give you advice and tips on what you can do to appear more fluid and likeable on camera.
GO AHEAD...... BLINK. quit staring at us. Good info though.
0:52
How come there is French vanilla? They don't have it unless they import from Madagascar or all over the world and they say it French which is fake cause they don't have it.
Tahiti is a french island...
@@aventureraclette This does not change the fact that Tahitian vanilla is its own brand, it is not sold because it is a French vanilla but very Tahitian with its particularity, you are playing politics.
@@Tuhiti.s I was responding to the initial post which seemed to have a problem of geography and nationality, not a problem of branding... You understand?
@@aventureraclette but there is no problem with what the person above said. he is right, FRANCE does not produce vanilla. Only the French call Tahitian vanilla FRENCH VANILLA, which actually does not exist.
I understand what geography and nationality mean, but let's give the Polynesians (Tahitians) the credit for what they produce and of which they are proud.
@@Tuhiti.s You've just given us a good lesson in hypocrisy
Dude. Blink!
0:52
OMG OF BEAUTIFUL 🌈🌎🛡️
Its creepy how you stare into the camera
I'm scared
0:52
6:57
Mexican is the classic vanilla flavor.
Rodelle?