One of the most common questions we receive is:
"Can I add more alcohol to my extract?"
The answer is usually yes—but the reason you're topping off matters.
Most extract makers top off for one of two reasons:
1. You've Been Using Your Extract
Over time, you may remove a tablespoon here and a few ounces there for baking, coffee, frosting, gifts, and recipes.
Eventually the liquid level drops, and you'd like to replace what you've used.
2. Your Extract Lost Liquid During Extraction
Sometimes the liquid level drops even though you haven't used any extract at all.
This is especially common in extracts containing ingredients beyond vanilla beans. Cacao nibs, coffee beans, dried fruit, ginger, cinnamon sticks, and other ingredients naturally absorb alcohol during extraction, causing the liquid level to decrease.
Both situations are normal.
The 20% Rule
For traditional vanilla extract, a good rule of thumb is to avoid adding more than about 20% of the original alcohol volume at one time.
For an extract that started with:
- 1 ounce vanilla beans
- 8 ounces alcohol
That means adding approximately:
1.5–2 ounces of alcohol
is generally reasonable.
Think of it as maintaining your extract rather than creating a new batch.
Why You Have Some Built-In Flexibility
The standard VanillaPura ratio of 1 ounce of beans to 8 ounces of alcohol creates a strong starting point.
Because of that, replacing a modest amount of alcohol usually has very little impact on flavor, especially in a mature extract that has already been extracting for several months.
What About Specialty Extracts?
This is where things become less precise.
Ingredients such as:
- Cacao nibs
- Coffee beans
- Dried fruits
- Ginger
- Cinnamon sticks
- Other spices
can absorb a surprising amount of alcohol.
As a result, the liquid level may drop significantly even when no extract has been removed from the jar.
Because every ingredient absorbs differently, we avoid giving hard rules for specialty extracts.
Instead, we recommend a simple approach:
Replace what appears to have been lost through normal absorption or use.
If ingredients are no longer fully submerged, adding enough alcohol to cover them again is generally reasonable.
Think of topping off specialty extracts as maintaining the extraction environment rather than following an exact formula.
Give It Time to Blend
Whenever fresh alcohol is added:
- Return the jar to a cool, dark place.
- Allow several weeks for flavors to rebalance.
- Continue extraction as normal.
Fresh alcohol needs time to absorb flavor compounds already present in the extract.
Immediately after topping off, the flavor may seem lighter. Given time, the extract often regains balance.
A Practical Way to Think About It
If you've used some extract, replacing a modest amount is usually fine.
If ingredients have absorbed alcohol and the liquid level has dropped, replacing what was absorbed is usually fine.
The goal isn't to maintain a perfectly exact measurement throughout the life of the extract.
The goal is to keep ingredients submerged, maintain flavor, and allow extraction to continue as intended.
When in doubt, look at the jar:
✔ Ingredients covered
✔ Healthy color development
✔ Pleasant aroma
✔ Plenty of extraction time remaining
If those boxes are checked, your extract is likely doing exactly what it should.
Happy Extracting!











































































































































