Subscribe
Renew
Customer Service
Buy An Article

Purchase an article from the September issue!


View Cart



To order a copy of an article from this issue, click on “Purchase this article.” For customized, large-quantity reprints, or articles not available online, contact FosteReprints. To order a copy of an article from this issue, call 630-653-2155 or email us at customerservice@allured.com

Issue Date:  May 2005
pg 36

Key Materials: Inside Vanilla



Daphna Havkin-Frenkel, James French, Fulya Pak and Chaim Frenkel, Cook College, Rutgers State University

Abstract: Vanilla planifolia's botany, curing options and future market prospects

Vanilla (Vanilla planifolia Andrews) is a climbing orchid indigenous to Mexico (F-1A). Vanilla was introduced to Europe by the Spanish Conquistadores in 1520, but commercial production of vanilla didn’t begin for another 300 years with the discovery of hand pollination of the vanilla flower. In the wild, vanilla flowers are pollinated by insects. When left on the vine, vanilla beans senesce, as manifested by yellowing and, next, by browning (F-1B), a process resembling commercial curing. However, the flavor quality of naturally cured beans is inferior.

In commerce, vanilla is propagated by cuttings and is cultivated in tropical regions. The plant requires three to four years to fl ower, and flowers once a year. The fruit (vanilla bean) is allowed to develop for eight to 10 months before harvesting. Worldwide production of vanilla beans is around 2,000t annually (US Department of Commerce and EUROSTAT).

Vanilla beans are harvested green, flavorless and subjected to a curing process for three to six months, depending on various curing protocols in different localities. The objective of the curing process is to develop the prized vanilla flavor and, in addition, to dry the cured beans for subsequent ethanolic-water extraction that renders the familiar vanilla extract.

This review will deal mostly with the curing process. Vanilla cultivation, biosynthesis, and economic aspects are discussed extensively in other reviews. We do however provide information on the botany of the vanilla bean and how it may be related to the understanding of the curing process. For the complete article, click on "Purchase this article."




Copyright © 2008 Allured Business Media | Contact Us | Legal Terms