- The definition of the word vanilla is "little pod" in Spanish.
- The
Aztecs called vanilla tlilxóchitl, meaning black flower, which
indicates that they were more interested in the cured bean, which is a
dark brown, rather than the flower itself which is a greenish white.
- Vanilla is extracted from the cured pods (beans) of the orchid flowers from vanilla vines.
- The
vanilla vine is an orchid which is indigenous to South Eastern Mexico
and dates, in the West, to Cortez's conquest of the Aztec Kingdom in
1519.
- French
vanilla beans have the distinction of being called "Bourbon" Vanilla
because the cultivation first started on the island of Reunion, East of
Madagascar. At the time, it was known as the "Island of Bourbon."
- A few drops of vanilla will cut the acidity of tomato-based foods.
- Just
like the grapes that make wine, no two vanilla beans are the same in
flavor, aroma, or color. It is possible to grow the same vanilla vine
in Madagascar, Indonesia, Tahiti, Papua New Guinea and India, but all
five cured beans would have their own distinctive flavor due to
differing soil and climate conditions.
- The aroma of vanilla is known as calming, relaxing and sensual - making vanilla an aphrodisiac.
-
A 1990s study of patients undergoing tests at Memorial Sloan-Kettering
Cancer Center in New York found that the scent of vanilla soothed
patients -- especially while undergoing magnetic resonance imaging.
- In some cultures, vanilla was a sacred medicinal herb, used to heal and soothe.
- Dr.
John King wrote in the American Dispensatory of 1859, "vanilla is an
aromatic stimulant useful in infusions for treating hysteria,
rheumatism and low forms of fever. It is said to exhilarate the brain,
increase muscular energy and stimulate sexual propensities."
- Spiders don't like vanilla. Use whole vanilla beans to drive away those eight-legged creatures.
- With
a love of botany and cooking, President Thomas Jefferson was the first
American to bring vanilla to the United States. Jefferson brought
vanilla beans home to the US in 1789 following his tenure as ambassador
to France.
- The
United States is the largest consumer of vanilla in the world, followed
by Europe (France represents most of European consumption).
- To accentuate flavors, add a few drops of vanilla to most recipes that contain fruit, vegetables, meat or fish.