Union Beach
New Jersey, USA
Javier Tochihuitl Vázquez
Principal of the Career of Agroindustrial Processes
At Universidad Tecnológica de Xicotepec de Juaarez
Puebla, Maexico
Stephanie Zabel
Harvard University Herbaria
Cambridge
Massachutsetts, USA
Charles M. Zapf
Technical Innovation Center McCormick & Co. Inc.
Hunt Valley
Maryland, USA
PRODUCTION OF VANILLA - AGRICULTURAL SYSTEMS AND CURING
1 Mexican Vanilla Production
Juan Hernández-Hernández
1.1 INTRODUCTION
The vanilla species of commerce,
Beginning in the mid- to late eighteenth century, the Totonac of the Papantla region of the state of Veracruz were the first and only vanilla exporters in the world for nearly 100 years, in part because of the exceptional quality of the vanilla that was produced. Gold medal prizes for Mexican vanilla were awarded in Paris (1889) and Chicago (1892) (Chavez-Hita and González-Sierra 1990), as Papantla was famed as, “the city that perfumed the world.” Initially, Mexican vanilla production depended on harvesting the fruits from the wild, which were the result of natural pollination by bees that are endemic to the New World tropics.
The Mexican monopoly on vanilla fell apart with the discovery of a method for hand pollination of vanilla in Belgium in 1836. This knowledge enabled other countries to become vanilla producers. By 1870, French colonies in the Indian Ocean, especially Reunion and Madagascar, surpassed Mexico as the leading producer. Madagascar has retained the leading role in production since that time (Bruman 1948; Bory
Although Mexico has lost its standing as the major vanilla exporter, it continues to be the center of origin and genetic diversity for this important orchid. Cultivation in Mexico endures to the present, mostly by the Totonac, who have continued to use their vanilla crop as a means to obtain cash, and because it is part of their historical and cultural fabric.
The area of vanilla production in Mexico is found between the coast and Sierra Madre Oriental on the Gulf, from sea level to a height of 700 m, where the climate is hot, humid, and tropical. Average temperatures are around 24°C, relatively humidity is 80%, and average annual precipitation is 1,200 to 1,300 mm. A marked dry season occurs from March to June. In winter, there are humid, cool winds of low intensity called
The state of Veracruz accounts for 70% of national production. Oaxaca and Puebla together produce most of the remaining 30%, and small quantities of vanilla are also supplied by San Luis Potosi, Hidalgo, Chiapas, and Quintana Roo. The municipality
An estimated 4,000 families are engaged in vanilla cultivation, mostly indigenous people, who exclusively sell green vanilla. Six private companies and four farmer cooperatives also exist, and participate in curing and selling of vanilla to national and international markets.
Annual production in Mexico varies from 80 to 200 tons of green vanilla (10-30 tons cured vanilla beans), depending on climatic conditions and the intensity of flowering, among other factors. In 2008/2009, according to estimates by the Consejo Nacional de Productores de Vainilla, 150 tons of green vanilla beans were produced (ca. 20 tons cured vanilla beans). The principal limiting factors to vanilla production in Mexico are:
• drought and high temperatures, which occur during flowering and fruit development;
• the fungus
• high production costs and low prices for vanilla.
1.1.1 The Mexican Vanilla Legend
The Mexican vanilla legend, which is an oral Papantla tradition, is compiled and interpreted by Professor J. Nunez-Dominguez (Curti-Diaz 1995):