Maple MishapsEditorial by Jeff Green
There are some pretty complicated
setups for making maple syrup. Professional producers often talk
about vacuums and osmosis and sugar percentages and the like.
But at its root maple syrup is very
basic. All a person has to do is gather sap and then boil and boil
and boil until it turns into syrup.
You might say, any fool can make maple
syrup.
That's where we come in at the
Frontenac News. We know all about being fools. You might say it's a
preoccupation of ours.
So here is our primer on the ten most
common errors in maple syrup production, as tested by our staff.
Do not bother tapping Elm trees,
or Oak trees for that matter. I personally tap the same Elm tree
every year. I see the hole from the previous year and figure it must
be a Maple. It never runs. One day, perhaps, Elm trees will start
producing sweet sap. I'll let everyone know when that happens
Make sure that before you drill a
hole you have a spile and a bucket to go with it. Just drilling
holes and watching the sap drip onto the ground is considered to be
arborial cruelty, even if the tree is not in any real danger.
Check your sap buckets
periodically to see if they have holes in them. They don't work as
well when they have a leak. (Hint: If you find that some trees don't
seem to be producing even if they are always dripping when you check
the buckets, a leaky bucket may be the problem. Just tip the bottom
of the bucket skyward over your head to see if any light gets
through – it helps to make sure the bucket is completely empty
before doing this.
You will need some system of
storing sap – a holding tank or bins of some sort -something that
isn't too “tippy”.
The next section concerns the most
precarious stage in production, the boiling itself.
Drinking sap as a spring tonic is
perfectly acceptable, but the practice of bathing in the syrup early
in the boiling process is to be discouraged among all members of the
family, no matter how old or young they may be. Tends to harm the
finished product. Gamey, smoky and sharp are not the kind of
adjectives you want people to use when describing the taste of your
syrup.
It is recommended that whatever
kind of pan you use to boil down the sap, it would be best if the
pan does not leak, again for obvious reasons. However, if it leaks
at one end, that end can be raised so the sap does not leak out. Be
sure the heat does not build up over the dry, leaky, end however.
Smoky syrup, anyone?
You can boil down syrup using
wood, oil, electricity, or propane, and as everyone knows, 25-50
litres of water needs to be boiled off the sap to produce a single
litre of syrup. People have been known to wander off during a boil,
or to fall asleep during a boil. This is not recommended, for two
reasons 1) burnt syrup, (this is beyond smoky) and 2) burnt house.
Be very careful when the sap has
been reduced down to near syrup. There are various ways to tell
whether the syrup is done. There is temperature (when the
temperature begins to approach the 219 degree Fahrenheit, 104 degree
Celsius mark); there is the two-drips-off-the-spoon technique, and
there is the sheeting-on-the-spoon technique. Unfortunately none of
these techniques work. It has something to do with the sea level.
One thing is certain, when the syrup is bottled and huge crystals
develop that cling to the glass, the syrup has been overcooked.
Do not - I repeat - do not, leave
the finished syrup laying around in a finishing pan in your kitchen
or back room for three or four months uncovered before getting
around to bottling it. Unlike blue cheese and some dessert wines,
introducing different kinds of mould to syrup is not a good idea.
Funky is not an adjective you want to be applied to your syrup
When the season is all done and
the trees go into bud, do not leave the pails and spiles in the
trees. Whatever sap that is left in the buckets will ferment; the
spiles will be harder and harder to remove, and the buckets will
take on an aroma that may lead next year's syrup to be as bad as
this year’s.
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