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Guadeloupe Vanilla: Growers, Buying Direct and Creole Cooking

Published on September 4, 2025 · by Ismael Samuel

Guadeloupe Vanilla: Growers, Buying Direct and Creole Cooking

There’s a scent that never lies the moment you push open a planter’s drying shed, up in the humid heights of Basse-Terre: a rounded, almost chocolatey perfume that clings to your fingers. Guadeloupe vanilla is nothing like an anonymous industrial product. It’s a climbing orchid, grown in the shade of the tropical understory, pollinated by hand flower by flower, then cured for months. As a resident who has been roaming the leeward coast for years, I’ll take you to the growers and explain how to spot a good pod, store it and use it in Creole desserts. Far from the calibrated little bags made for tourists.

A Caribbean vanilla, cousin of Bourbon

You’ll often see Caribbean Bourbon vanilla on the stalls, and that’s partly true. The variety grown here is mostly Vanilla planifolia, the same species as that of the Indian Ocean islands behind the “Bourbon” name. Transplanted to the Guadeloupe archipelago, this butterfly-shaped French overseas region, it develops a woodier, sometimes cocoa-like profile, inherited from the volcanic terroir of Basse-Terre.

A few pointers to place the product:

  • Guadeloupe is split into two wings: the limestone Grande-Terre (turquoise beaches) and the volcanic Basse-Terre, dominated by La Soufrière (1,467 m) and covered in tropical forest. Vanilla grows on this humid wing.
  • Cultivation is concentrated on the leeward coast, around Bouillante, Vieux-Habitants and the foothills of the national park, where the shade and humidity suit the vine.
  • You’re still on French soil: payment in euros, French and Creole spoken, dialing code +590, and no customs formalities to bring your pods home.

Guadeloupe’s production stays artisanal and small-scale, light-years from Madagascar’s volumes: a niche product, best bought straight from the source rather than at the supermarket.

Gros plan de gousses de vanille noires affinées prêtes pour la cuisine et la vente directe
Gousses de vanille affinées, prêtes pour la cuisine créole — © Qwirki & Co. (Pexels, Pexels License)

Where to buy your vanilla direct from the grower

Buying direct means paying a fair price and leaving with full traceability. Here are the right reflexes, from one Basse-Terre vanilla grower to the next.

The plantations and gardens of the leeward coast

Several farms in Bouillante and Vieux-Habitants combine vanilla, cocoa and coffee in a Creole garden open to visitors. You’ll see the vine on its supports, the drying shed, and you’ll leave with pods from the latest curing batch.

  • Guided tour: budget €8 to €12 per adult, often free for children, with a tasting included.
  • Duration: 45 minutes to 1 hr 15, ideal to combine with a morning of diving at the Cousteau Reserve (Malendure, Pigeon islets), 10-15 minutes away.
  • From Pôle Caraïbes airport (Pointe-à-Pitre), the leeward coast is 45 to 60 minutes away via the N1 then the Route de la Traversée.

The markets and realistic prices

If you’re staying in Grande-Terre, there’s no need to cross over: the markets of Sainte-Anne, Saint-François or Pointe-à-Pitre offer pods, sometimes from local growers. Always ask about the origin. An archipelago vanilla is sold by the pod or in a bundle, never in a cellophane-wrapped bag. As for budget, it’s one of the most expensive spices in the world:

  • €2 to €4 per pod at the market or on a stall, depending on length and suppleness.
  • €6 to €12 for 3 to 5 pods in a bundle straight from the planter.
  • Beware of abnormally cheap pods: often repackaged imported vanilla.

Recognizing a quality pod

On a stall, everything comes down to touch and smell. My criteria:

  1. Suppleness: a good pod bends into a U around your finger without snapping. Brittle = too dry, so too old.
  2. Oiliness and shine: the surface should be slightly oily, almost varnished, never dull or powdery.
  3. Color: a deep dark brown, sometimes marked with fine white vanillin crystals (the frosting), a sign of aromatic richness. Don’t confuse it with grey, downy mould, which is a defect.
  4. Smell: rounded, warm, indulgent. If it smells of alcohol or of nothing at all, move on.
  5. Length: aim for 14 to 18 cm for cooking.

Storing your vanilla without spoiling it

It’s the traveler’s classic mistake: keeping your pods in the fridge. Definitely not, the cold dries them out. Here’s the method that works.

  • Away from air and light: wrap the pods in parchment paper, then slip them into an airtight tube or a sealed glass jar.
  • At room temperature, in a cupboard, never in the fridge or the freezer.
  • If a pod dries out, add a few drops of local rum to the jar to rehydrate it, a Caribbean classic. Well stored, pods keep for 1 to 2 years.

Zero-waste tip: a scraped pod isn’t thrown away. Drop it into a jar of sugar for homemade vanilla sugar, or into agricultural rum for an infused rum.

Fleur blanche d'orchidée Vanilla planifolia sur sa liane, la plante dont proviennent les gousses de vanille
La fleur du vanillier (Vanilla planifolia), origine des gousses — © Everglades National Park (Wikimedia Commons, Domaine public)

Using vanilla in Creole cooking

Vanilla is the quiet soul of Caribbean baking. To release its aroma, the technique is always the same: split the pod in two, scrape out the seeds with a knife, and infuse seeds and pod in a hot liquid (milk, cream, syrup).

Iconic Creole desserts

Here are the recipes where a Creole vanilla dessert truly comes into its own, easy to recreate in a rental’s kitchen:

  • Coconut flan: coconut milk, eggs, sugar and an infused pod. The great Sunday classic.
  • Coconut blanc-manger: a set coconut-milk custard with vanilla and lime zest.
  • Tourment d’amour: the iconic tartlet of Les Saintes (Terre-de-Haut), filled with vanilla coconut jam.
  • Vanilla infused rum: a split pod in a bottle of agricultural rum, left to steep for a month.
  • Flambéed bananas, where the vanilla balances the punch of the rum.

Savory pairings and the right dose

Vanilla isn’t confined to the sweet: a touch lifts a fish colombo or a sauce for ouassous (local prawns). As for dosing, count one pod per 50 cl of liquid, and start modest because it’s intense.

When to come and how to extend the experience

The best time to visit Guadeloupe remains the dry season, from December to April (the carême). The harvest tends to spread between the rainy season and the start of the carême, but growers sell their cured stock all year round. A plantation visit pairs ideally with a morning at the Cousteau Reserve from Malendure.

To build your full itinerary between the two wings of the butterfly, the islands (Les Saintes, Marie-Galante, La Désirade) and the must-sees, our complete guide to Guadeloupe covers it all, beaches, volcano and inter-island logistics.

Cooking your vanilla on the spot: where to stay

The real pleasure, when you bring back fresh pods, is cooking them that very evening facing the sunset. But you still need a fully equipped kitchen and a well-located place to stay.

At Hostel Toucan, a 100% Guadeloupean concierge and vacation rental service, we select accommodation near the markets, the beaches and the plantations, with everything you need to cook your local produce. By booking direct, you benefit from:

  • direct booking with no platform fees: you pay the fair price, not the commission;
  • free cancellation up to 7 days before arrival;
  • 7-day WhatsApp assistance for your on-the-ground questions, from the best vanilla planter to the ideal time slot for the Cousteau Reserve.

Discover our vacation rentals in Guadeloupe to settle in as close as possible to the flavors. And if you own a property on the archipelago, our concierge service for owners handles check-in, cleaning and showcasing your home, right down to the vanilla-scented welcome basket.

Guadeloupe vanilla is a concentrate of patience and volcanic terroir. Head up to the growers, smell, bend, taste: you’ll leave with a genuine piece of Basse-Terre.

FAQ

Where can I buy Guadeloupe vanilla directly from the grower?

Head to the leeward coast of Basse-Terre, around Bouillante and Vieux-Habitants, where plantations combine vanilla, cocoa and coffee. The guided tours (€8 to €12 per adult) end with a tasting and the chance to buy pods from the latest curing batch. At the markets of Grande-Terre, always ask about the origin to avoid imported vanilla.

How much does a Guadeloupe vanilla pod cost?

Count on €2 to €4 per pod at the market and €6 to €12 for a bundle of 3 to 5 pods from the planter. As vanilla is one of the most expensive spices in the world, beware of abnormally low prices, often a repackaged imported product. Bring cash, as few stalls have a card terminal.

How do I store vanilla pods after buying them?

Definitely not in the fridge, which dries them out. Wrap them in parchment paper, place them in an airtight jar and keep them at room temperature, away from light. Well stored, they last 1 to 2 years. If a pod dries out, a few drops of local rum are enough to rehydrate it.

Which Creole desserts can I make with Guadeloupe vanilla?

Vanilla is the soul of coconut flan, coconut blanc-manger, the tourment d’amour of Les Saintes and infused rum. Split the pod, scrape out the seeds and infuse seeds and pod in hot milk or cream. Count one pod per 50 cl of liquid.

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