Making your own vanilla extract is ideal — but not always practical when you need a bottle right now. We tested eight commonly available extracts across three applications (vanilla cake, sugar cookies, and pastry cream) to find the ones worth buying.
The Rankings
1. Nielsen-Massey Pure Vanilla Extract — Best Overall
Nielsen-Massey is consistently the top recommendation among professional bakers, and after testing it's easy to see why. The flavor is sweet, complex, and genuinely rich — not just "vanilla-flavored." It has subtle floral notes and a creaminess that lifts any baked good.
It's not cheap, but the flavor is noticeably better than everything in the mid-price tier. Buy the larger bottle to get the price per ounce down.
Amazon Pick
Nielsen-Massey Pure Vanilla Extract
$18–$35
2. Rodelle Pure Vanilla Extract — Best Value
Rodelle surprised us. At roughly half the price of Nielsen-Massey, it delivered a bold, assertive vanilla flavor with a slightly syrupy richness. Some testers found it slightly more intense than Nielsen-Massey — not necessarily worse, just different.
If you bake in large quantities and don't want to spend Nielsen-Massey prices on every batch, Rodelle is the answer.
3. Simply Organic Pure Vanilla Extract — Best Organic Option
Clean, mild, and floral — Simply Organic is the most delicate extract in our test. It uses Madagascar Bourbon beans and has a lighter flavor profile that works beautifully in anything subtle: whipped cream, light sponge cake, or anything where vanilla shouldn't overpower.
It's certified organic if that matters to you, and the price is fair for the quality.
4. Watkins Pure Vanilla Extract — Best Everyday Option
Watkins has been making vanilla extract since 1868 and their pure extract is a solid everyday performer. Sweeter and more straightforward than Nielsen-Massey, it's the extract you can buy in bulk and use without thinking. Widely available and consistently good.
5. McCormick Pure Vanilla Extract — Widely Available, Gets the Job Done
McCormick is what most people grew up with, and it's fine. It has a bolder, more assertive flavor with what testers described as "rummy notes." It works well in chocolate recipes where vanilla plays a supporting role. It's not what we'd reach for in a vanilla-forward dessert, but at its price point and availability, it's a reasonable pantry staple.
What to Avoid: Imitation Vanilla
Imitation vanilla (also called "vanilla flavoring") uses synthetic vanillin rather than real vanilla beans. It's cheaper, but:
- The flavor is flat and one-dimensional
- It can turn slightly bitter in high-heat baking
- It lacks the 200+ flavor compounds that make real vanilla complex
The price difference between imitation and real extract has narrowed significantly. There's very little reason to use imitation vanilla anymore.
Homemade Still Wins
All of these extracts are good — but none of them match the depth and complexity of homemade extract made with quality beans and left to steep for 3–6 months. If you haven't tried it, our beginner's guide to making vanilla extract walks you through the whole process.
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