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(Estimated 115 beans per pound, give or take a few)
Excellent resale item - See below for real retail value of this product!
Grown in Papua New Guinea
6-7 Inches Long
Sun Cured Vanilla
Each vanilla bean is extremely fresh and moist, and contains roughly 60,000 small and edible black seeds. This item ships right away, right after payment is received, the same or next day fast by priority mail! Vanilla keeps indefinitely and actually gets better with age a lot like wine, and it does not require refrigeration!
This auction also comes with 5 Free How To Use Whole Vanilla Beans Guides with the rights to reprint the guide on your own.
Vanilla is the only edible fruit of the orchid family, the largest family of flowering plants in the world. It's a tropical orchid, and there are about 150 varieties of vanilla, though only two types - Bourbon and Tahitian -- are used commercially. Vanilla grows within the 20-degree band either side of the Equator and is native to the Americas.
Vanilla is the world's most labor-intensive agricultural crop, which is why it's so expensive. It will take up to three years after the vines are planted before the first flowers appear. The fruits, which resemble big green beans, must remain on the vine for nine months in order to completely develop their signature aroma. However, when the beans are harvested, they have neither flavor nor fragrance. They develop these distinctive properties during the curing process, and these Tahitian vanilla beans are sun cured.
Here are other regular retail prices compared to 1 pound of vanilla priced at $47.70.
All of these prices are readily available online:
Compared to Whole Spice : $140.00 per Lb (66% off)
Compared to Mountain Rose Herbs : $130.00 per Lb (63% off)
Compared to Arizona Vanilla Company Tahitian: $199.95 per Lb (76% off)
Compared to Boston Vanilla Bean Company : $126.83 per Lb (62% off)
Compared to Bulk Foods : $135.95 per Lb (65% off)
Assuming an average resale value of a modest $130 per pound, that would give this auction a total retail value of $1,300.
Assuming an extremely low resale value of individual beans sold at $1.50 per bean, that would give this auction a total retail value of roughly $1,725.
Just as "Turn On, Tune In, Drop Out," was a catch phrase of the 1960s pop subculture, "Calm Down, Feel Good, Lose Weight," seems to be nearly everyone’s mantra in the first years of the new millennium.
For many of us, the hectic pace of modern life leaves us anxious and exhausted, and all too often, too tired and cranky to take time for the exercise that might lift our spirits. While there is no elixir that will magically cure all that ails us, nor a perfect panacea for our harried lives, there is some useful help available as close as our kitchen cupboards.
Early Uses of Vanilla in Medicine
For the Totonaca, vanilla was a sacred herb that they incorporated into all levels of their lives. As a medicine it had a number of uses. Dr. Francisco Hernandez documented some of the uses of vanilla in traditional Totonaca medicine. He wrote that the vanilla flowers were made into "collars" that served as amulets to prevent various illnesses. Vanilla beans were an antidote for certain venomous bites. Mixed with chocolate it allegedly cured flatulence. It was used for respiratory pain and congestion, deep coughs, stomach ailments, and was even made into a salve to treat syphilis.
Blends of traditional herbs and vanilla were also used. Vanilla beans, combined with mecasuchil, allegedly encouraged better circulation, opened airways, stopped aches and chills, and cured chills and fever. In conjunction with ahoyapatl, it was used to treat heart conditions. And with yoloxochitl it supposedly cured sterility. The changes in Totonaca culture over the past 75 years have resulted in their no longer using vanilla as a medicine though they do continue to use many of the other less expensive and more readily available native herbs for healing.
Europeans, and later, Americans, considered vanilla a stimulant but, paradoxically, also a treatment for hysteria and nervousness. Dr. John King wrote in the American Dispensatory in 1859 that vanilla was an aromatic stimulant useful in infusion for treating hysteria, rheumatism, and low forms of fever. "It is said to exhilarate the brain, prevent sleep, increase muscular energy and stimulate the sexual propensities."
Vanilla was also used extensively to flavor tinctures and syrups and to perfume medicinal ointments, a practice that continues today. (Vanilla is one of three flavors most used in medications and syrups, and it is also used as a neutralizer in noxious smelling medicines.) A sweet tincture was made to treat stomach disorders, and this medicinal value was listed in the American Pharmacopoeia until 1916. For years Coca Cola syrup was a popular home remedy for an upset or queasy stomach. The syrup contained a high percentage of vanilla, which most likely was the key healing ingredient.
Modern Uses of Vanilla in Medicine
In 1991 Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York announced in a news release that the fragrance of heliotropin – a sweet vanilla-like scent – was the most relaxing and pleasant of five fragrances tested for the reduction of anxiety and distress during a difficult medical procedure. With a grant from the Olfactory Research Fund, Drs. William Redd and Sharon Manne of Memorial Sloan-Kettering’s Psychiatry Service, tested eighty-five patients who were undergoing magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) as part of their initial workup. During an MRI scan, patients lie motionless for up to an hour in the narrow cylindrical core of the scanner. Anxiety associated with this medical procedure causes up to 10 percent of patients to terminate their scans before completion. Results of their initial tests showed that patients exposed to heliotropin while undergoing their MRI experienced 63% less overall anxiety than a control group of patients who were not given the fragrance during the scan.
An Antidote to Stress
The results of the pioneering aromatherapy tests at Sloan-Kettering prompted a series of additional tests to further determine which aromas produced the best results and how test-subjects rated the various fragrances. Heliotropin was consistently rated the most pleasant and most relaxing. 57% of participants said they would still like this scent after an hour of exposure, whereas only 25 to 30% of participants stated they would still like the other five scents involved after an hour of exposure. In a later comparison of 22 scents examined in the research series of fragrance tests, heliotropin consistently rated most favorably in terms of having pleasant, relaxing and moderately intense properties. They concluded that, "vanilla, a homey scent which may remind people of food, may be a preferred scent. Its recent rise in commercial popularity is well-deserved."
Response to Sloan-Kettering’s work was dramatic. Many hospitals in the Eastern part of the United States incorporated heliotropin as a way to make MRI scans easier on patients. I first read about the studies in the early 1990s and decided to make vanilla beans available to women I knew who were going through surgery, radiation and chemotherapy. I chose Tahitian vanilla as it contains the highest percentage of heliotropin. My research was not intended to be scientific, rather, simply possible assistance to friends. Their response was so overwhelmingly positive that I now suggest carrying a vanilla bean or two in a glass tube for anyone going through anxiety-producing events, medical or otherwise.
Calming a Queasy Stomach
Based on my discovery that vanilla was used as a stomach calmative in American medical journals, I also provided Tahitian vanilla extract for the women to see if the liquid form was helpful. One friend, who was going through a very toxic treatment for uterine cancer, said that the extract in water was the only thing that calmed her stomach for two days after each chemotherapy treatment. I have used vanilla extract in mineral water for a queasy stomach with success and have added a small amount of extract to milk or juice for agitated children. In a recent conversation a New York attorney said that her daughter-in-law was experiencing a particularly difficult pregnancy and couldn’t keep anything on her stomach. They tried everything. Finally, the attorney put a vanilla bean in room temperature soda water and suggested her daughter-in-law sip it very slowly, breathing the aroma at the same time. The young woman’s morning sickness cleared up immediately, much to her relief and her doctor’s amazement.
After the Sloan-Kettering success, vanilla became the signature scent in a large variety of products, including carpet fresheners, candles, potpourri, and a large variety of perfumes. Annette Green, president of the Fragrance Foundation, an educational institution says, "It’s all part of the olfactory ‘security blanket.’" Green attributed the increased use of vanilla to the above-mentioned scientific studies.
Weight Loss and Vanilla
A recent study at the St. George’s Hospital in London indicates that vanilla may help you lose weight. Under the guidance of Catherine Collins, a state registered dietician at St. George’s, overweight people who were given vanilla-scented skin patches found that their sweet food intake was significantly reduced, leading to greater weight loss than those given dietary advice alone. She concluded that an intensely sweet vanilla-scented candle or essence may have a similar effect though it hasn’t been proven in a test environment. Dieticians in the United States working with overweight people are also often testing clients with an array of aromas as a way to reduce food cravings. While vanilla may not work for everyone, it appears to be useful for most. Breathing the aroma of a vanilla bean in a glass tube, or wearing vanilla body products may be helpful.
Mood Enhancement with Vanilla
There appears to be ample evidence that aroma also affects mood. The fact that vanilla is associated with home, food, security and pleasure, helps to evoke a sense of wellbeing. Realtors often use a vanilla room freshener or put extract in water in a warm oven before showing a home that’s for sale. I personally suspect that vanilla may also have a pheromone-like quality to it as numerous people have told me that they have found that vanilla essences attract attention. I have also found that men are quite drawn to the scent of vanilla and have had a number of requests for a vanilla-based after shave or cologne (I’m still looking, guys!). As the queen, I always wear vanilla fragrances. I have had people with whom I’m talking suddenly say, "I always feel so calm (or happy) around you." Another typical response is, "What are you wearing? It smells soooo good!" (While I would like to take full credit for a scintillating personality, I have to defer to the perfume as part of my "charm.")
Probably one of the most telling experiences of vanilla possibly mimicking a pheromone involves one of my cats. When she was younger, every time I sorted vanilla beans on the dining table, she would rush in, grab a vanilla bean, and run away with it. The rest of the day she carried the bean around with her, acting in much the same way that cats become delirious over catnip. In telling this to a research veterinarian he confirmed my suspicion that animals are attracted to the scent of vanilla by saying that they used vanilla to create stimulus and response in very sick animals. He also found that it assisted in bringing back appetite in dogs after surgery. And in other veterinary research, it has been found that the vanilla aroma and flavor are important for encouraging calm and appetite interest in nursing sows and growing piglets.
Here is some of the feedback I have received about this item:
"AWESOME, AMAZING VANILLA!!! Super fast delivery...will definitely buy again!!!"
"5 stars all the way. Vanilla beans look and smell fantastic - thanks!"
Disclaimer:Information within this site is for educational purposes only. Statements about the product efficacy have not been evaluated by the U.S. Food & Drug Administration. These products are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.
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Item location: Norfolk, VA, United States
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