Things Bakers Know: The King Arthur Baking Podcast

Vanilla: Boring or the Best? with Claire Saffitz

44 min
Apr 13, 2026about 2 months ago
Listen to Episode
Summary

This episode explores vanilla as a complex, underrated ingredient rather than a bland flavor. Hosts Jessica Badalana and David Smarkin discuss vanilla's origins, production challenges, and quality variations with guest baker Claire Saffitz, who advocates for using vanilla thoughtfully and generously in recipes where it can truly shine.

Insights
  • Vanilla's reputation as 'boring' contradicts its reality as a labor-intensive, expensive, and flavor-complex ingredient requiring hand pollination and careful curing
  • Quality and type of vanilla product (extract, paste, bean) significantly impacts flavor intensity and application—vanilla is not interchangeable across all uses
  • Vanilla paste offers a middle ground between extract and whole beans, providing visible seeds, ease of use, and moderate potency at comparable cost to extract
  • Vanilla should be used intentionally as a featured flavor rather than a default addition; it can overpower or disappear depending on recipe context and quality
  • Artificial vanillin serves a legitimate market need and carries nostalgic value for consumers raised on mass-market products, though it differs fundamentally from real vanilla
Trends
Growing consumer interest in ingredient quality and sourcing, particularly for specialty items like vanillaShift toward 'quiet luxury' gifting with high-quality, long-lasting ingredients rather than consumablesIncreased availability of vanilla products through non-traditional retail channels (TJ Maxx, HomeGoods, online specialty retailers)Reclamation of artificial vanillin as a legitimate flavor choice rather than inferior substitute, driven by nostalgia and intentional flavor designRising vanilla prices driving consumer interest in bulk purchasing and alternative forms (paste vs. extract)Educational content around ingredient selection and substitution becoming more prominent in baking mediaEmphasis on flavor pairing science (vanilla with brown butter, citrus, caramel) in professional baking discourse
Topics
Vanilla production and supply chain (Madagascar, Tahiti, Mexico, Uganda, Ecuador, Hawaii)Hand pollination requirement for vanilla orchids and historical discovery by Edmund AlbiusVanilla curing and drying process affecting final product characteristicsVanilla extract vs. vanilla paste vs. whole bean comparison and substitutionArtificial vanillin production from petrochemicals and market dominance in mass-market productsVanilla flavor compounds and terroir variations by geographic originVanilla pricing and price gouging in retail marketsFlavor pairing strategies: vanilla with brown butter, citrus zest, caramel, butterscotchVanilla in custard-based recipes (ice cream, flan, panna cotta, crème brûlée)Vanilla in chocolate chip cookies and blondiesExtract substitution guidelines and potency differences (almond, coconut, peppermint, lemon)Vanilla bean storage and shelf life considerationsVisual presentation of vanilla seeds in white cakes and frostingsNostalgia marketing around artificial vanilla and birthday cake flavorSustainable sourcing and climate vulnerability of vanilla crops
Companies
King Arthur Baking Company
Podcast host and producer; sells vanilla products including 16oz bottles and larger formats; offers bakers hotline su...
Bon Appétit
Claire Saffitz's former employer where she created the 'Gourmet Makes' series recreating mass-produced snacks
TJ Maxx
Retail location mentioned as premier source for discounted vanilla extract and specialty baking ingredients
HomeGoods
Retail partner with TJ Maxx for sourcing discounted vanilla products and specialty baking supplies
People
Claire Saffitz
Guest expert advocating for vanilla as a premium, complex flavor; author of 'Dessert Person' and 'What's For Dessert'
Jessica Badalana
Co-host discussing vanilla applications, gifting strategies, and personal baking projects
David Smarkin
Co-host providing technical information on vanilla production, chemistry, and product types
Edmund Albius
12-year-old enslaved child who discovered hand pollination technique for vanilla orchids in 1840s Reunion Island
Sarah Jump
Creator of simple stovetop vanilla pudding recipe and one-bowl vanilla cupcake recipe featured in discussion
Christine Atosie
Referenced for reclaiming artificial vanillin as legitimate nostalgic flavor without shame
Shilpa Oskowicz
Co-host of Bon Appétit Bake Club podcast mentioned in cross-promotion segment
Jazzy Sepcek
Co-host of Bon Appétit Bake Club podcast mentioned in cross-promotion segment
Quotes
"Name a better flavor. Just try. Just name one."
Claire SaffitzEarly in episode
"Vanilla is one of those things where there's so many flavor compounds going on, from one vanilla to another or from paste to extract or from time of year."
Claire SaffitzMid-episode discussion
"If it's being sold to me as a vanilla something, I want to see it and I want to smell it and I want to taste it for sure."
Claire SaffitzQuality discussion
"Vanilla should not just be the label that it gets to make it sound like it has something in it."
Claire SaffitzOn vanilla as default flavor
"I bring our 16 ounce bottles of vanilla. That's what they are. It's the kind of thing that even if somebody is a casual baker, because as I was saying, like it never goes bad. So if they're an avid baker, they're going to be stoked."
Jessica BadalanaGift recommendation segment
Full Transcript
You know, I don't want to co-op this whole episode to talk about Vanolin. Yeah. But I do think we should brainstorm some different names for it. I'm going to say Felicia. Let's just call it Felicia. From King Arthur Baking Company, this is Things Bakers Know. I'm Jessica Badalana, King Arthur's staff editor. And I'm David Smarkin, editorial director at King Arthur Baking. And today we're talking about vanilla. You know, it's kind of funny because somewhere along the line, vanilla became a descriptor for like a really basic, super boring, kind of ordinary thing or person. But it's actually. Yeah. Not that you've ever used it that way. No, of course not. It's actually one of the most fascinating, delicious ingredients in the world. And I learned so much researching this that really is kind of mind blowing. Yeah. Today we are going to flip the script on vanilla. And after this episode, you're going to be using the term vanilla to describe interesting things. Yeah. Like quantum physics, so vanilla. You know? Like the state of the world is so vanilla. Oh my gosh. I love it. Yeah. We're reimagining. So before we get into talking about the flavor of vanilla, I think we need to talk about what vanilla is. Yes. You're going to give me a lesson. I can feel it. Yeah. Like the consensus coming. The dynamic is really starting to evolve. So vanilla is the seed pod of a vanilla orchid. I mean, if you've ever seen a vanilla bean, you're like, yeah, that tracks. It looks like a withered seed pod. And these orchids are, you know, they're a fair weather plan. They only grow in like a really narrow band around the equator. So or in a greenhouse, right? But really, their like home base is, you know, right around the equator, including Madagascar, where half of the world's vanilla is produced, which is kind of crazy because Madagascar, not a huge place. Tahiti, Mexico, Uganda, there's a very small amount of vanilla produced in Hawaii, in Ecuador. But it's a, you know, like wine or cheese, where the vanilla is grown has an impact on sort of its flavor. So it has terroir. It has terroir, yes. Exactly. What did I say? Terroir? Terroir. I just get so nervous. I know, but I'm going to keep shooting for the fences. You keep putting these foreign words in and trying your best. I can say them when I'm not on camera. Yeah, sure. Which by the way, we're on YouTube and Spotify now. Watch this. Yeah, you're just. Watch me mispronounce these words. I just imagine you're in your bathroom mirror every morning like terroir, biscotti. I can do it. I can do it. But it's also, as we talked about, like very labor intensive to grow vanilla. Like this isn't just like a set it and forget it kind of plan. You need it, you know, you need the right weather. So it's a crop that's like very susceptible to, you know, a warming climate, which is the thing that's happening now. Vanilla orchids are hermaphroditic, which means that they have both male and female reproductive organs. However, for whatever reason, the vanilla flower is self-sterile. So all of the vanilla orchids in the world have to be hand pollinated. I mean, this is crazy. Somebody has to go in and pollinate them. This is crazy to think about. I don't know exactly how it's done. That would be interesting to like drill down more on how things are hand pollinated. But, you know, you start to see like, OK, here we have this plant that only grows in a really narrow band in the world that will not, you know, propagate unless a human intervenes. And that discovery was actually made in the, you know, 1840s. So there was an enslaved, I was going to say man, but really a child, a 12 year old, Edmund Albius, and he worked on a plantation on the island of Reunion. But he learned that, you know, they brought these vines to Reunion Island, which is in the Indian Ocean. And they were like, hey, nothing's happening. Like these vines aren't, you know, like they're not propagating. And so he realized that they all had to be hand pollinated. I doubt they gave him a lot of credit for that discovery. But that's the only way that Vanilla has been able to flourish in places around the world because he discovered that they all have to be hand pollinated. Yeah. That's sort of a dark origin story. I mean, so many origin stories are dark origin stories to further complicate things. So like here it is narrow band of the world. Now it has to be hand pollinated. You can only hand pollinate Vanilla bean orchids for like a couple of hours. Is the window of pollination. That's the window for which the pollination will take. Yes. So like God help you if you're on your lunch break then. Like forget it. It's just like the crop is. And then they like adding to all of that, like the, you know, the weather things. So. So once the flowers are pollinated, then the seeds begin to grow. Yeah. The seeds. And that's what we really think of as the vanilla beans. Yeah. Those seed pods. And they sort of look like green beans are about the size of a longish green bean. Yeah. And they're not like the sticky pods we think of when we think of vanilla, like that we would buy at the grocery store from a wholesaler. Before we can use them, those pods have to be cured. Yeah. If I'm not mistaken. Yeah. Then dried. Yeah. And that's when they become the black shriveled pods that we know. And are obsessed with. Yeah. I mean, truly it is. So, you know, when you think about all that, you're like, well, no wonder like vanilla and vanilla extract, vanilla beans, vanilla extract are really expensive. So right now, I mean, when I last checked, I don't know if it's like how much it varies day to day, but a kilo. So 2.2 pounds of vanilla bean pods, Madagascar grown vanilla bean pods is going to run you about 300 bucks. Yeah. That, to be fair, that is a lot of vanilla beans. Um, and you know, I think a little vanilla does go a long way, like a little real vanilla, but not, not as far as you'd think. And so of course, like now there is a robust secondary vanilla production, which is artificial vanilla, because true vanilla is so expensive that, you know, given our like worldwide appetite for vanilla and the flavor of vanilla, like we can't keep up, like there just simply is not enough true vanilla in the world to satisfy the world's desire. And I'm glad that we have a separate name for this artificial vanilla. I pronounce it Vanolin. Yeah, that's right. So, uh, and it's what gives, you know, gives vanilla-ish flavor and aroma to things. So Vanolin is a compound that is found naturally in vanilla beans, but the artificial version of course is made in a lab, then synthesized from guacal and oil. There we go again. I'm just setting you up with these words. Made from petrochemicals. Ah, petrochemicals. Yeah. And of course it's much, much less expensive. Yes. It's much, much less expensive. I mean, there's some irony here, right? Like vanilla is, as I said at the top of the show, supposed to be like the most basic, boring flavor, yet our collective desire for things flavored like vanilla is and also I should say scented like vanilla is so great that it just like vastly outpaces the amount of natural vanilla that we can produce. So, I mean Vanolin to the rescue question mark, I don't know. But I mean, imitation vanilla is the standard for vanilla flavored things that are, you know, sort of mass market products. So like, you know, vanilla box mix, birthday cake, vanilla frosting, like anything that you buy, you know, not from a bakery, but from a store. That's a sweet thing that has vanilla. And that's relatively cheap. It's going to have Vanolin. And I do sort of have, and I'm not alone in this, like I have a sort of nostalgia for that flavor because I think it is the flavor of, you know, birthday cake. You know, when we talk about birthday cake flavored things, what we're talking about is a Vanolin flavored thing. And I mean, and we've talked about this in previous episodes, like these things are like engineered to be delicious. Like they capture some of the essence and then, you know, and I almost amp it up in this sort of artificial way, but it is kind of compelling. Yeah. I think Vanolin, you know, artificial vanilla, vanilla essence, whatever you want to call it has had an interesting journey through in the court of public opinion. Yeah. Yeah. And I think it's a generational thing. You know, I think, you know, previous generations to ours, probably like a lot of them, you know, didn't want anything to do with Vanolin because it was new and fake. Yeah. But our generation and generations after us were really raised on this stuff. So it's very nostalgic for us. So, you know, I think what in Christine Atosie has really led the charge of reclaiming that flavor of Vanolin as a specific flavor, a nostalgic one, one that is where there's no, that there's no shame in chasing if you want. Yeah. You know, she's really, she's really, she's really gone sort of deep in the pocket. She's deep in the pockets of corporate vanilla. No, she, but she really makes a good point. Like if you want that classic birthday cake flavor that you are nostalgic for from your childhood, you need the Vanolin. Yeah. You do not want, you know, vanilla beans. So it's an interesting thing. And I can appreciate, you know, the no shame of it all. Like there's no shame in either. I almost wish that I had a different name. Yeah. Because I think like Vanolin is to vanilla. You know, there are different things. And I don't want to, you know, I don't want to co-opt this whole episode to talk about Vanolin. But I do think we should brainstorm some different names for it. Like I'm going to say Felicia. Let's just call it Felicia. I think it's funny because the last time we brainstormed ideas was for white chocolate. And I don't think we were super successful. You know what? I think it got cut from the episode. Oh, did it? Yeah. We had some great names that I'll tell people. What was it that I came up with? It's probably going to get cut from this one too. No matter how many times you say it. I think it was creamy butter chips or something like that. I don't know. People never believe from our bad name suggestions that we work with words for a living. They're like, how much work shopping? But anyway, we'll do that later. We'll do that later. We'll do that on our own time. We'll do that on our own time because we have, you know, we're sick of a true vanilla. And there are true vanilla. We are not alone in thinking like that vanilla is a really dynamic and interesting flavor. And today we have one of the country's best bakers, Claire Saffitz, who is a staunch defender and vanilla enthusiast here to talk to us. So I want to give time for that conversation. And then I want to give time for listener questions. So let's let's hear your conversation with Claire. Yeah. Claire Saffitz probably does not need introduction to most of our audience. But in case you don't know her, she's the author of two cookbooks, Dessert Person and What's For Dessert. She has a robust YouTube operation. She's out there cooking on YouTube all the time. She, of course, was one of the famous Bon Appetit crew. And she got, you know, a lot of attention for her series there called Gourmet Makes, which was recreating a lot of mass produced snacks. A lot of them which use Vanillin. Yeah. And of course, she was, you know, remaking them in a gourmet way. When I texted Claire and asked her to come on this episode specifically, I said, this is the right episode for you, right? Like you want to, would you want to talk about Vanillin? She was like, absolutely. Name a better flavor. Just try. Just name one. I was like, whoa, you don't need to. Don't yell at me. Or if you're going to yell at me, yell at me on the podcast. Let's record it. Oh, she did. So let's listen. Claire Saffitz, welcome to Things Baker's Note. It's been such a long time that I've wanted you to be on this podcast, my friend. You are one of the world's biggest vanilla fans. When I texted you and asked what you thought about vanilla, you said, name a better flavor. Just name one. Which was very impressive. I could not name one. OK, well, thank you for having me on. I am very excited to be here. And I am honored to be on the vanilla episode because it is truly one of the great flavors and so unique and special. And I don't know how the word vanilla got associated with something like bland and boring because it is neither bland nor boring. So I'm very excited to talk about it. But do you feel like do you ever taste things that are vanilla like cake or whatever you taste of vanilla cupcakes say? And you think to yourself, actually, this is bland and boring. This does not have enough vanilla flavor. Do you think people are using enough vanilla in their baked goods? I think sometimes the word vanilla is like the default. It's like the default flavor. It's sort of like it doesn't have a flavor. So it gets labeled vanilla maybe because it has a couple of teaspoons of vanilla extract in it. But I do think if you're going to market it as vanilla, it should have it should have a distinct vanilla flavor and or like maybe you see specs of vanilla bean in it because I kind of want to see the proof a little bit. Like if it's a cake, it doesn't just call it a butter cake. If it doesn't have a flavor in a sense, like it doesn't vanilla should not just be the label that it gets to make it sound like it has something in it. So yeah, if it's being sold to me as a vanilla something, I want to see it and I want to smell it and I want to taste it for sure. Can you describe what vanilla tastes like? And I think this is a tricky question, but I'm going to throw it to you anyway. Can you describe it? Like how would you describe it to somebody who has never had it? I think it's like you can't define the word with the word. Like I don't know. It is to me sort of indescribable if you can't. If you know if you haven't had it, it is very aromatic, even a little bit spicy. But I think it's sort of hard to describe what because it's so singular. It's like it doesn't have a lot in common with a lot of other types of flavors. But I'm just saying I'm just dancing around the idea of what it actually tastes like, which is to say that it just tastes like vanilla. I think it's so hard to describe without saying that it tastes like vanilla. Yeah, I mean, I think you did a great job. But I also love that you caught out to spiciness and that you caught out that it can be aggressive because there have been moments, especially when I bake with vanilla beans, that I feel like I've overdone it. Like it can get very intense and it's a strong flavor. It's the opposite of what the reputation is, right? It can be very strong and very not vanilla, very. I think it could be sort of like a bully of a flavor if you overdo it. What do you think? Yes. And I think there's also so much variation in quality of vanilla. So one vanilla product compared to another might taste very, very different, actually. So that's another reason why I think it's difficult to kind of pin it down in a way. Like it can be really spicy. It can be very floral. I think vanilla is one of those things where there's so many flavor compounds going on, from one vanilla to another or from paste to extract or from time of year. Like there's probably so many variations from Madagascar, vanilla to Tahitian vanilla, that kind of thing. But when you have a high quality vanilla product, like you're using like a nice, soft, juicy whole vanilla bean, it can be very overpowering. I also think it has that very perfume quality. And it's not just because it is used like literally in perfume and candles and other scents. So it is like I said before, just it is that very singular aroma and flavor. It has to be used very carefully and thoughtfully because it can overpower or it can totally disappear. So you have to be sort of conscious of the product that you're using and how strong is it and that kind of thing. It's not just like any vanilla extract or any paste or or a vanilla bean. Yeah, 100%. And, you know, this brings me to one of my questions for you, which was what is your preferred vehicle for vanilla? Is it extract? Is it paste? Is it bean? But also, can you talk a little bit about whether vanilla is the kind of thing where you get what you pay for? I mean, because you're talking about like all these flavor compounds. How careful do you have to be about the quality of those? Yes. So my preferred vehicle these days is paste. I love, I love vanilla paste. I think you get it's just like this perfect kind of middle ground where you get it's more it's stronger, a more pungent and effective than extract. But you get the ease of extract, which is just like and I keep it in a squeeze bottle. I have to say, I tend to be pretty extravagant with my vanilla use. And so and part of that is because I keep it in a squeeze bottle. It's so easy to just like add a couple little shots of it to whatever it is I'm making. So I love it. I think like scraping of vanilla bean, vanilla beans are are it's a little risky for vanilla bean because they dry out so fast. So in this kind of segues into your question about price, I like to buy vanilla beans in bulk, but it's risky because if they dry out, then you're kind of at a loss. So I just feel like keeping paste is like you get a lot of the benefit of the bean because you have the seeds in there. You get the ease of extract. You get a flavor that's somewhere in the middle in terms of it's like potency. So as far as price, I generally think you get what you pay for. But I do think there's crazy price gouging that happens actually with vanilla. So I would just come. I would just shop around and like compare prices. I think that there is stuff at the grocery store that's 20 bucks. That's really, really expensive and you can get a better deal elsewhere. And I would definitely consider buying in bulk because you'll get a much better deal and like an extract if it's stored. While like, you know, there's nothing's going to happen to it. So also I feel like my mom's they were placed up by vanilla extract is TJ Maxx. They have it on the shelves. I don't know if it's good or not, but I think you can get a deal. I think TJ Maxx and HomeGoods is the premier store for vanilla. I mean, I think you really can't get good vanilla there. That's why I've bought vanilla for so many years when I lived in Chicago, that I would just stock up on vanilla there. So sometimes you're using paste, sometimes you're using your homemade extract, sometimes you're using beans. What types of recipes do you feel allow vanilla to shine the best? For me, it's always like the dairy heavy, the simple, dairy heavy recipes, which almost always means custard. So of vanilla ice cream, a flan, a panna cotta, to me, dairy is a blank canvas. You know, there's there's certain like, obviously, we know that the flavors and vanilla are soluble and alcohol, but I just feel like they also really come through in dairy and maybe that's partly because there's some fat soluble flavor compounds or just by heating it, you know, it's infusing the dairy. But that like the way that the vanilla bean and seeds infuse the flavor of dairy like milk or cream is so special and so delicious. So and also you're really seeing the seeds when you're work when you're working with a custard of some kind. So that's where I really use it. I feel like in a cake recipe where you're adding starch, I would just go extract because it's like you have other things that are kind of competing. But the canvas of just a creamy, delicious recipe is is so perfect for vanilla. And that's where I really want it. And that's where I think you really experience the most intense and kind of like clearly articulated flavor from vanilla. I love that you are talking about the flavor, but also the visuals too. And because that is such a big part of it. I understand you're obsessed with vanilla. You can't get away from it. You dream about vanilla. You named your child vanilla. Like I get it. But vanilla also you're also pairing with vanilla in a lot of ways. Right. So what is what do you think are the best pairings with vanilla? Great question. I think you cannot make a chocolate chip cookie without a ton of vanilla. So somewhere along the way in my baking journey. And I don't remember when or where it came from. I learned the idea that to get butterscotch flavor of any kind, you have to combine. It's the combination of butter and sugar and vanilla. And it's such an essential like trifecta, these three things combined. So for a chocolate chip cookie or a blondie, any kind of baked good where you want a butterscotchiness, whether that's from caramel or toffee or, you know, any combination of these flavors, like you have to have a lot of vanilla is so essential. So as brown butter, brown butter and vanilla together are just the most magical combination. Vanilla and citrus zest also is such creates this kind of hybrid, like floral flavor enhancer that is so magical, like orange zest and vanilla together in like a sweet bun or in a cake is it is in some ways like greater than the sum of its parts. You could do orange zest, lemon zest and vanilla together. And if you have vanilla seeds from a bean and you have zest and you massage it into sugar, the perfume that it creates is so, so amazing and powerful. So those are the times where I think vanilla is so enhancing and it does not get lost. Like all of those things together kind of create a new, even more amazing flavor. And then there's other combinations where I think it can be overpowered or it just gets lost and kind of obscured. And so then I'm going to maybe throw in like a little bit of maybe extract just there in the background. I think sometimes chocolate and vanilla like chocolate is a really strong flavor. So I think it's not, of course, it's delicious, but it just doesn't work with chocolate in the same way that it works with these other kinds of ingredients. So, yeah, citrus and anything like butterscotch caramel, definitely. Claire Savitz, thank you so much for being on Things Bake Us Now. It was a pleasure to have you here. This will not be the only time we ask you to be on the show, so I hope you'll come again. Thank you for having me on. This episode is brought to you by our recipe of the year, flaky puff crust pizza. That may sound familiar to you. That's because we did a whole episode on this special recipe back in January. But the pizza is so good, we think you should be baking it all year long. It's like if a pizza and a croissant had a baby, you would have... You're just showing off with your pronunciation now. Bonjour, hi. So flaky, so crispy, so delicious. And also, critically, it can be made in under two hours. It's a really fun bake, too. You get to do lamination, but it's not hard lamination. And it just turns out each time. Turns out and feeds a crowd, which I think is really nice. You can find the recipe by searching flaky puff crust pizza on our website. We also have a video showing you how to make flaky puff crust pizza. Say that 10 times fast on our YouTube channel. I'm Shilpa Oskowicz. And I'm Jazzy Sepcek. And we're the hosts of the Bon Appetit Bake Club podcast. Bake Club is Bon Appetit's community of confident, curious bakers. Jazzy and I love to bake. Some might even call us obsessive. And we love to talk about all the hows and why's and what didn't work that come with it. Every month, we publish a recipe on bonappetit.com that introduces a baking concept we think you should know. Then you'll bake, send us any questions you have. And we'll get together here on the podcast to talk about the recipe. So consider this your official invitation. Come join the B.A. Bake Club. New episodes on the first Tuesday of every month, wherever you get your podcasts. Happy baking. It's time for our next segment, Ask the Bakers. For Ask the Bakers, we want to hear from you. If you have a burning question for us, head to kingArthurbaking.com slash podcast to record a question. And we may end up using it on the show. That's kingArthurbaking.com slash podcast. And of course, if you have a baking question right now that simply cannot wait, you can always reach out to our bakers hotline by a phone, email or online chat. There's an actual question. We'll call you back in a minute. If you have a question, email or online chat. There's an actual real human with baking experience on the other end. It's wild. You can go to kingArthurbaking.com slash bakers dash hotline. That's kingArthurbaking.com slash bakers dash hotline. Or call us 855-371-2253. That's 2253 as in bake. We're here for you. Let's go to our first question. I've heard that vanilla paste is all the rage. Than vanilla extract. And how do I substitute it into recipes? Oh, I love the skepticism there. What makes it supposedly better? The shade. I appreciate this. Well, you know, I think better, right? Like it's not necessarily better. It's just different. Just different. So I say to my kids. You know, I think that, you know, and actually when we were talking about this yesterday, one of my first reactions was, well, it's a lot of the great things about vanilla extract, but at a cheaper price point, actually not true. Yeah. Then you crunch some numbers. And you were like ounce for ounce. Pretty much the same. Pretty much the same. So, you know, and I know Claire talked about this a little bit, but of course the vanilla bean paste, I mean, paste is a little bit of a misnomer because when I think of a paste, I think of something with like the texture of peanut butter. Yeah, like something you can bread. And this is more like a, it's fluid. It's got some viscosity. It's like a syrup almost. And yeah, I think that's a fair comparison because it also has sugar added. I think those are the one of the main things to know about vanilla paste. It's sweetened. It's not so sweetened that like, I mean, you're using it in such small quantities. It's not going to throw off your recipe. But it is a little sweetened. If you're putting it in whipped cream, it's going to sweeten your whipped cream, which is nice. But it's not going to give you, if you want, for whatever reason, an unsweetened vanilla whipped cream, then you would use vanilla extract, not vanilla paste. Right, exactly. But then you would lose out on one of the other key properties of vanilla paste, which is your favorite property of vanilla paste, I think. Yeah. Well, that has the seeds in it. Yeah. It's like, you know, so if you want, if you're making something that is white in color and you want to see those vanilla bean flecks in there, which I think make, like it's sort of premium, you know, like, first baby. Yeah, totally. Feed those eyes. So I use vanilla bean paste if I'm making, you know, whipped cream, vanilla frosting, you know, crème brûlée. A white cake. A white cake. Yeah. Because you're going to taste it, you're going to see it. If I'm making, you know, anything else truly, I'll use vanilla extract. And you can substitute them one for one. So if your recipe calls for a teaspoon of, you know, vanilla extract, you can use a teaspoon of vanilla bean paste. And, you know, we always like, you'll see all over King Arthur, we measure vanilla, they say with our hearts, you know, we don't use it. We just sort of dump it in. Shout out to Itali on Instagram. I think she coined that phrase. Oh yeah. We measure vanilla with our hearts. That's really taken. I mean, that's really a, it's a luxury stance. Yeah. Because we have an endless supply of vanilla at home. I'm like, I don't measure my heart. I measure with the measure. Yeah, exactly. Yeah. The nice thing too is like vanilla extract, vanilla bean paste, they don't expire. I mean, maybe I don't think so. I don't think they ever expire. And, you know, I'm always like, I go to visit my father and my one of our family jokes is that I always am like finding things in my dad's pantry that are like so old. Yes, you've had some really interesting stories. Just some really wild stuff. And recently he was like, I've had this vanilla extract since your mother died. My mother died, you know, like eight years ago. And he was like, is it still good? I was like, actually, that's the one thing I can say. Yes, like everything else in here should be thrown out. But vanilla bean paste is fine. Yeah. Well, let's go to our next question. Hey, King Arthur Baking. This is Jessica in Pikesville, Maryland, and I've got a question for you. I am an avid home baker and I have collected over the years many different extracts and flavorings, much more beyond simple vanilla extract, which definitely has its time and place in baking. So my question is, how do I substitute a different flavoring, a different extract in a recipe in place of vanilla? Is it a one to one ratio or do I have to scale back, let's say, an almond extract, the amount of an almond extract in comparison to the amount of a vanilla extract? How do I replace vanilla extract or some vanilla extract with a different extract, a different flavoring in my baking to experiment, to play around, to make things a little different? I'm turning to you for this answer. I know you'll have a good one. I can't wait to hear it. Thanks so much. Do you see my eyes get wide when she was like, can I substitute them one for one? It's like, Jessica, don't do it. I did your eyes get wide and I panicked. You see me shake my head? Yeah, we were. Yeah, I mean. Extracts are interesting. I actually have a note I want to give at the end of our answer about a specific extract, but why were your eyes getting wide? Well, first of all, I should say there are endless amounts of extracts out there now. Like if you go to the grocery store there, I mean, the ones that you might be more familiar with almond extract, peppermint extract, lemon extract. And then we start to get into sort of what I would consider to be more rogue territory, orange extract, root beer extract. Like there are some coconut extract, just that are going to have a more specific use case. And they vary greatly in strength, very, very different. I can't understate. I'm at a loss for words because I'm so worked up about it. I try to say that most extracts that are not vanilla are stronger than vanilla extract. So you would not do one to one because if you put it, if you measure with your heart with almond extract or coconut extract, you're going to have something inedible. You're going to have something that tastes so strong of that. Yeah, extracts are really powerful. Yeah. I mean, almond extract in particular, it's like a little bit of almond extract. Delicious a lot. Am I being poisoned? Oh, you know, like it's got such a strong bitter presence. So I would say, you know, if you want to, you know, if you want to mess around. I think the use case here is if you what if there's a vanilla cake and you want to turn it into a coconut flavored cake? Sure. So your recommendation, let's say it calls for one teaspoon of vanilla. Your recommendation for our coconut. Yeah, I would start with like a quarter of that amount. I mean, you can always go up. You can never go down. And I think coconut, like, you know, because they're not again, they're not all created equal, I would say coconut is not as powerful as like a lemon one or an almond one. Like I'm just getting really nervous about somebody putting in like a tablespoon of almond extract into something because it will be, it'll be inedible. How can they test this? So we cannot recommend tasting raw batter. So you can either like make the cake and just experiment and the next time you bump it up or down, if you like, I guess you could maybe stir some extract into some whipped cream or something to taste the how powerful it is. Yeah, I mean, you know, we can't we can't a good content to say to taste the batter. No, we can't. We can't. That's all we can say. And we won't. And we can't. Yes, that's a good place to leave it. I also think like where you're using the extract, like, you know, if you're using it in a batter, you know, versus a frosting or something, like, you know, like you have more ingredients to dilute it. So frosting is a great place to experiment. You could do a little batch, take a little batch out and you have to do some math, you know, but yeah, and I think, you know, you've got to use your noodle about this a little bit. Like there are a lot of things I'm like, well, you can't just like, I wouldn't just like dump a lemon extract into a chocolate cake. Like that's not going to be delicious. I mean, I don't think that Jessica is suggesting that, you know, but you want to think about like flavor pairing. It's like maybe an orange extract, maybe a peppermint one, but you know, it's going to change the, you know, it's going to change the flavor of your cake. So it's a big wide world out there. It is. Yeah, it is. And I do think, yeah, a little experimentation, but just be, you know, just be careful about that almond extract. She's really worried about that. I'm really worried, Jessica. Next question. Hey, vanilla is pretty expensive. Are there some times I can get away with not using it? This is a great question and a really fair question in this economy. Like, yeah, I mean, come on. I mean, we want to make baking as accessible as possible. And we did talk about this with Claire. I was really interested to hear her answer on this because as someone who loves vanilla as much as she does, where does she use it? Does she use it in everything? Because, you know, so many chocolate cakes, have you adding vanilla to the mix? And is it necessary? That's kind of an interesting question. So let's call out Claire. No. Let's bring her back. I generally, even though I am someone who is adding vanilla to like a lot of my baked goods, I don't add it to every single one. I don't think it's an afterthought in that way that looks like, oh, just the thing you add a couple of splashes of, I think vanilla is best when actually it is its own flavor and that it is not just there for the sake of being there because we think that we have to add it to baked goods. So that's why it's great to have a couple of different kinds of you have an extract. You have maybe some paste or you have some whole beans because they're used really differently. That being said, I just love it so much that I do add it a lot. Do a lot of what I make. But it's not an afterthought. And that might be one of the reasons why it can be sometimes criticized. Oh, you just if you're adding it thoughtlessly to everything and you're not really tasting it, I can see why people would think that it's not the amazing flavor that it is. The point of this being that vanilla can really shine on its own. And I encourage people if they want to, if they love to bake and or, you know, or do pastry or make ice cream or whatever it is to really invest in like one bean, which is an investment, like weirdly at the grocery store, for some reason, one bean cost $20 and then you can get a pack of 25 beans for 50. You know, if you order them online or something, you know, from a specialty site. So I would say play around with it and really use it in a way that you're going to experience the full flavor and not just as a thing that you keep a little jar of it and add it to a cake that you're making because it's so special on its own. So I agree with Claire. I think that, you know, certainly if you have a chocolate cake that you love and that you like how it tastes, I'm not telling you have to stop putting vanilla in it. You know, it's not going to do harm. But if you have something that's really, really strong flavor, you can probably leave the vanilla out and maybe not miss it. Yeah. Yeah. So use it in a place, you know, if you have to choose where it's really going to shine. That makes sense. Well, that's the end of our question. So now we get to go into our favorite segment. Right. Every episode we like to check out with Jessica to see what wildly surprising and full-throated opinions are in her head. She's already given a few of this episode, but let's check in to see what her official just opinion is about vanilla. Well, this is sort of a, I mean, I'm taking a different spin because, you know, people often, I think there is, you know, there's a lot of talk about quiet luxury. Yeah. Right. Like I think about that a lot as I'm getting older, like fewer, better things, which I think is a good, you know, it's a good guideline. We don't need more stuff. We just, so one of the things that I really like to do any time I'm like, you know, we're heading into like summer travel season, you know, when you're hosted and you want to bring something and you're like, what do I do? I bring wine. Is that something I should be doing? I should be doing. Thank you. Yeah. Yeah. Maybe I'll do like a sideline manners. When I run out of opinion, then I'll move to manners, which I have a lot of opinions about actually. Just etiquette. Just etiquette. Oh, all right. Season four. It's going to be a spin off show. I don't know. I like to bring our 16 ounce bottles of vanilla. That's what they are. Yeah, that's that one, which is a very generous amount of vanilla. And it's the kind of thing that even if somebody is a casual baker, because as I was saying, like it never, you know, it never goes bad. So if they're an avid baker, they're going to be stoked. Yeah. If they're an occasional baker, they'll use it for like, they'll be thinking about you for the next 10 years. Yeah. And it's the kind of thing like getting it in that big bottle. Like you're not going to do that for yourself because it's a little splurgey. I think that's like an $80 item, you know, but like cheaper than like one night in a crummy hotel, you know, like they're washing the towels there, like preparing the meals, like it feels like a really thoughtful, you know, and generous gift, sort of a luxury and quiet luxury. Yeah. I think that's a great gift. And I do buy this for myself, of course, you know, full disclosure, I have the King Arthur discount that was, but it is cheaper ounce for ounce. Of course, you do have to, you know, have the money on hand to buy it. It's fun. Yeah. It's fun to use. It's fun to pour vanilla from this big bottle. I've never sported. We have a size bigger than this. Do we? Yes, we have like a, it's like a two liter or something. Wow. Chug chug of vanilla extract. It's, it's just fun and it lasts a really, really long time. Yeah. Although if you're measuring vanilla with your heart, as we're talking about for a long time, as long as you think, maybe break up the teaspoons. So maybe my just opinion is one, like never show up empty handed. Like I don't care what you do. Like, you know, do not. It doesn't, it doesn't, you know, doesn't matter what you bring, but you should bring something, but it does matter. And you should bring something that is thoughtful and a large bottle of vanilla extract is going to surprise and delight anyone you give it to, I think. Well, this is a really nice, kind, sort of tender just opinion. So I'd like to give a spin on it to make it a little more, a little more punchy. I think your just opinion is screw bottles of wine as a host gift. Bring a bottle of vanilla. Like you hate, you hate wine, right? Yeah. All right. Now I'm putting words in your mouth. Tell me, Jessica. What are you baking this week? I thought it was, I mean, we don't always line up our bakes with the theme, you know. But this week I, you know, I did because I've been thinking an awful lot about vanilla. And I recently came into a cache of vanilla bean. Speaking of gifts, somebody gave me like a bundle of 20 vanilla beans, which is a really nice gift. And I am going to make our simple stove top vanilla pudding. I love pudding. Yeah. So much. And this is a really nice recipe. You like it warmer, cold. Oh, I like it cold, very cold. OK. And I don't mind the skin if it gets a skin. But this is a recipe that's really simple, comes together all in a stove top and is made with sweetened condensed milk, which gives it like a very silky nice texture. So and it's like that is the place to use like your vanilla bean paste to really show off, like you'll not only be able to see it, but like you really will be able to taste it there. Yeah. Is that a Sarah jump? Oh, recipe. It is a Sarah jump. Oh, recipe. Can't lose. No, can't lose. I also am going with vanilla sweet because all this talk about vanilla. And for me, I don't eat a lot of cupcakes. I love cupcakes. I don't have occasion for cupcakes, really. I don't have kids, you know. Yeah. I mean, you don't need to have kids in my apartment. But ultra vanilla cupcakes with easy vanilla frosting. Again, another recipe where vanilla's really going to shine. Yeah. I would definitely use the little paste here or or vanilla bean. In the cake and in the frosting. In both. Yeah. So and you know, we have a speaking of the kids that you don't have, there is a one bowl vanilla cupcake recipe in that sweet and salty kids cookbook. Yeah. Which is easy enough for a kid to make. And we have a bunch of mix and match frostings too. So there's like you can, you know, confettiify the cupcakes or the frosting. And actually that's a place where like you can also mess around with your extracts, you know, like you can make a vanilla base and then flavor the frosting. So that's a fun recipe if you're looking for another another cupcake avenue. You know what my mom does that I very surprising to me? I go to her house. I love your mom, by the way. Open the your. I mean, is she listening? I hope she listens. Or maybe she doesn't. I don't. She's not a fan of the podcast. I think she gets to it eventually. Yeah. OK. We will shout out to mom's. I open her freezer and they were frozen cupcakes in there. Like iced cupcakes. I know. I didn't know you could freeze some. Where do they come from? Did she like like if she like gets them out of baking and shows it and she's raps in his room and throws it in the freezer. I've never seen that before. I don't know if it's the best thing you can do. But you know what? I've definitely thought when I'm eating it. It doesn't sound bad. We know frosting freezes well. We know cake freeze as well. Yeah. Your mom's just like getting a shortcut to. Yeah. I think it's a good idea. Anyway, you know, I don't know. We got so sweet here. I know. Sweer. We won't do it again. I promise. We will get back to being our best selves. Thank you for tuning in and joining us here on Things Bakers Now. Remember to like and subscribe on Apple Podcast, YouTube, Amazon, Spotify or wherever you listen. And leave us a review while you're there or share this episode with a friend. And in the meantime, don't forget. Follow the recipe. Things Bakers Now is hosted and executive produced by me, David Tamarkin. And me, Jessica Badalana. Rossi Anastapulo was our senior producer. Chad Shani is our producer and Marcus Bagala is our engineer. Original music by Megan and Marcus Bagala. Thanks again to Claire Saffitz for appearing on today's episode. You can find more about Claire and her work at desertperson.com. Things Bakers Now is a King Arthur Baking Company Podcast.