Jason Cash from Cash Pure Maple Syrup Farms[/caption]
Jason never had maple syrup until he started making it himself. One day over 20 years ago, Jason and his dad were walking the property and came across a line of sugar maples. The trees were standing in a straight line because the fence that kept the cows in was along that tree line. When his dad told him those trees could be tapped for syrup, he felt he had to try it!
“That next winter, I bought five buckets and pails and cooked it over the campfire for 48 hours straight. At the end I had about a quarter of a cup of maple syrup. It was delicious and I’ve been hooked ever since!” said Jason.
How to Process Sap
The processing is really simple – you boil the sap to remove the water, and then you filter the syrup to remove the sediments or sugar sand, as some people call it. The official ratio is 43:1 which means it takes 43 gallons of sap to make one gallon of maple syrup but it depends on the sugar content of your sap. Sap is mostly water, which is why you have to boil it down to get the maple syrup. “If it’s a wet spring, the trees will absorb that moisture and your sugar content will be lower, which means it takes more sap to make syrup. Conversely, if it’s a dry spring your sugar content will be higher,” he explained. You can test the sugar content of your syrup by using a hydrometer to measure the thickness of the liquid. [caption id="attachment_38861" align="aligncenter" width="694"]
Jason with hydrometer test cup for maple syrup[/caption]
When to Tap Trees
The tapping season is six to eight weeks, from late winter to early spring (Valentine’s Day to Easter), so it’s not a one-day project. It’s also very weather dependent – you need nights that fall below freezing to days that are above freezing. Sap only flows only when the temperature goes up. (You need the fluctuation from below freezing to above so the sap flows as the temperature warms up, then the roots replenish with water from the surrounding ground when the temperature drops below freezing.) You can get a gallon of sap from every tree with every temperature change. So if you have 20 trees, on average, you will have 20 gallons of sap to process. Every tree will run differently, but will average between 1-1.5 gallons per day every time we get a fluctuation in temperature. For every tree that you tap, you will get one quart of syrup for the season. [caption id="attachment_38859" align="aligncenter" width="750"]
Sap bags (pictured above) or buckets can be used to collect sap.[/caption]
If you want to have pure syrup for your family, that’s about four gallons of syrup. If each tree produces one quart of syrup, that means you need to tap 16 trees to have enough sap to make syrup for you and your family. “Sap is perishable once it leaves the tree – think of it like milk. After two to three days, it will sour, so you have to process it or keep it cold until you can process it,” said Jason.
If you don’t have access to maple trees, but you still want pure maple syrup, check out Lehman’s syrup. It’s boiled the old-fashioned way, in the same sugar shed the Lehman family has been using for 100 years.
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