OT--A day at the Sugar Shack
Posted: Sun Mar 24, 2013 8:55 am
My farm boys call late Friday night, telling me the sugaring season is winding down and that I need to get my arrrrs out there to see the new evaporator. So, with the excitement of a modern-day George Plimpton by 9 am yesterday morning, I'm breaking a sweat (not dragging a whitetail) hauling bucket after bucket of sugar maple "juice" back to the 200 gallon storage tank perched on the back of their pickup.
The weather was perfect the last few days (cold nights with a nice warm-up towards afternoon) and let me tell you, the sap was really flowing!! I had always thought it was more viscous. It's not. In fact, you would think you were collecting nothing but water
and that's not too far from the truth.
For those who have never seen an evaporator, it looks like a combination moonshine still/Enrico Fermi class project all rolled into one!! How the technology has evolved over the years is truly amazing but the basic process hasn't changed much, since the Indians started it many hundreds of years ago. Essentially, you are boiling/steaming off the water content of the sap until it reaches a sugar content of 67% ( hope I got that right). As the water content is reduced, naturally the solution starts to thicken. Simple, though very complex!! The evaporator is a series of sluices and baffles that keep the sap moving/flowing into several different compartments. The final two are where the real magic takes place and the boys were constantly pouring the boiling, syrupy brew into an elongated metal beaker and testing it with a hydrometer. Of course, all of this alchemy takes place over a roaring, wood-fed fire.
You really learn to appreciate the work involved in getting this stuff onto your breakfast table! They told me the ratios vary from early to late season but yesterday it took around 60 gallons of sap to = one gallon of syrup . I only wish I had brought my camera but truthfully there was so much steam, we were using voice commands most of the morning. We shut down @ 4:30 with a total of 3 gallons produced. I urge anyone who has never witnessed this operation to go and experience it for yourself!! To actually take part in a tradition, older than New England itself was very cool. As always, it was another memorable day out at the farm!! Wifey-poo is calling.....my waffles are ready and Aunt Jemima is sitting this one out!!!-----Tool
The weather was perfect the last few days (cold nights with a nice warm-up towards afternoon) and let me tell you, the sap was really flowing!! I had always thought it was more viscous. It's not. In fact, you would think you were collecting nothing but water
and that's not too far from the truth.
For those who have never seen an evaporator, it looks like a combination moonshine still/Enrico Fermi class project all rolled into one!! How the technology has evolved over the years is truly amazing but the basic process hasn't changed much, since the Indians started it many hundreds of years ago. Essentially, you are boiling/steaming off the water content of the sap until it reaches a sugar content of 67% ( hope I got that right). As the water content is reduced, naturally the solution starts to thicken. Simple, though very complex!! The evaporator is a series of sluices and baffles that keep the sap moving/flowing into several different compartments. The final two are where the real magic takes place and the boys were constantly pouring the boiling, syrupy brew into an elongated metal beaker and testing it with a hydrometer. Of course, all of this alchemy takes place over a roaring, wood-fed fire.
You really learn to appreciate the work involved in getting this stuff onto your breakfast table! They told me the ratios vary from early to late season but yesterday it took around 60 gallons of sap to = one gallon of syrup . I only wish I had brought my camera but truthfully there was so much steam, we were using voice commands most of the morning. We shut down @ 4:30 with a total of 3 gallons produced. I urge anyone who has never witnessed this operation to go and experience it for yourself!! To actually take part in a tradition, older than New England itself was very cool. As always, it was another memorable day out at the farm!! Wifey-poo is calling.....my waffles are ready and Aunt Jemima is sitting this one out!!!-----Tool