Just the Fun Vanilla Facts

V is for Virginia:Thomas Jefferson was the first American to bring vanilla to the U.S. when he returned to Monticello in 1789 following his tenure as ambassador to France.

A is for Aroma: Vanilla’s scent is known as calming, relaxing and sensual. It’s often used in perfume formulas and as a fragrance to conceal the strong odor of rubber tires, paint and cleaning products.

N is for North: Vanilla vines only grow 1-20 degrees north or south of the Equator.

I is for Ice Cream: Vanilla is still the most popular ice cream flavor in the U.S.

L is for Labor: Vanilla is the world’s second most labor-intensive agricultural crop, second only to saffron.

L is for Lifespan: A vanilla flower blooms for 24 hours and must be pollinated or dies.

A is for Ancient: Vanilla is one of the world’s most ancient flavors, dating back to Cortez’s conquest of the Aztec Kingdom in 1519.

B is for Bourbon: French vanilla beans are called “Bourbon” vanilla because cultivation first started around the mid-1800s on the French island colony of Reunion, east of Madagascar. At the time it was known as the “Island of Bourbon.”

E is for Europe: Vanilla beans are more popular in Europe. Americans tend to favor vanilla paste or extract because it’s easier than splitting and scraping a bean.

is for Africa:Until the late 1800s, Mexico had the monopoly on growing vanilla. Today, the island of Madagascar, off the southeast coast of Africa, grows the majority of the world’s crop.

is for Nickname: In Spanish, the word vanilla means “little pod.”

S is for Spiders: They don’t like vanilla; use whole vanilla beans to drive them away.

! The U.S. is the largest consumer of vanilla in the world!