Classroom lesson · Vanilla - the orchid in your ice cream · 🇲🇬 Madagascar

Vanilla - the orchid in your ice cream

Madagascar grows more vanilla than any other country in the world

A vanilla orchid vine with long green vanilla pods hanging from it

Photo · Wikimedia Commons

What is it?

Vanilla is a flavour you have probably tasted hundreds of times - in ice cream, cakes, biscuits and sweets. It comes from the pod of a climbing orchid plant. Madagascar grows more vanilla than any other country, so the next time you eat a scoop of vanilla ice cream, the chances are it started life on a Malagasy farm.

Tell me more

Vanilla begins as a flower. The vanilla orchid grows up trees like a vine, and it has pale yellow flowers that open for only one day a year. If the flower is not pollinated on that single day, no vanilla pod will grow at all.

In Madagascar's wild, only one special bee can pollinate vanilla, and that bee does not live everywhere. So farmers learned a trick: they pollinate every single flower by hand, using a tiny stick to gently lift one part of the flower and press it against another. The whole crop is hand-pollinated, flower by flower, on the day the flower opens.

After the flower is pollinated, a long green pod slowly grows over six to nine months. The green pods do not smell or taste of anything at first. The farmers pick them, then dry them in the sun for weeks. Slowly, the pods turn dark brown and start to smell - that's when they become vanilla.

It is one of the most expensive crops in the world. Around 80 percent of the vanilla used by ice cream and chocolate makers in Europe and America comes from Madagascar. Every pod is the work of many human hands.

In the classroom

Walk your class through this in 15 minutes.

Talk together

Discussion prompts

  1. 01Why might vanilla be one of the most expensive crops in the world?
  2. 02What is something you eat that takes a long time to make? Does knowing how it is made change how it tastes?
  3. 03If you had to pollinate one flower by hand on the day it opened, what would you have to remember?
Try this

Classroom activity

Bring in (or imagine) a scoop of vanilla ice cream. As a class, trace the journey: orchid flower in Madagascar → farmer's hand pollinating it → green pod growing → drying in the sun → packed and shipped → factory → ice cream → your bowl. How many hands has it passed through?