When the sun shifts in the sky and the first hints of spring are in the air, it is time for sugaring off to begin. The Blog Tech and I read about a Taste and Tour going on up in the highlands and headed out early to take part in it.
Sugaring off is the process of turning maple sap into maple sugar. This area is called the "land of milk and maple". There were 14 sugar shacks on the tour.
A warming tank holding hot maple syrup.
Joel was just setting things up when we got there.
You can see the wood fire burning through the window on the door.
The buckets are stacked neatly against the wall.
I thought they looked very artistic.
These are the vats where the sap is boiled down and turned into syrup.
Sap fresh from the tree has only 2% sugar content.
It takes 50 gallons of sap to produce 1 gallon of maple syrup.
This is the liquid gold in the bottom of the vat after it is boiled down.
This is where the syrup comes out.
These are the spiles which are nailed into the tree and the bucket is hung from the hook on them.
This was The Blog Techs favorite part of this sugar shack. He had already eaten most of the maple syrup from this sunday. The wonderful people that own this shack give you big scoops of vanilla ice cream and let you top it with hot syrup from the warmer I showed you above. And BTW, this entire tour was free. Each shack we visited offered a feast of food, all made with maple syrup, all free! This shack also fed us pretzels with maple mustard, maple blondies and maple cookies
Sugaring off is the process of turning maple sap into maple sugar. This area is called the "land of milk and maple". There were 14 sugar shacks on the tour.
Getting to some of the shacks was an adventure on it's own. They tend to be out in the woods at the end of long winding roads. The area is breathtakingly beautiful. |
A warming tank holding hot maple syrup.
Joel was just setting things up when we got there.
You can see the wood fire burning through the window on the door.
The buckets are stacked neatly against the wall.
I thought they looked very artistic.
These are the vats where the sap is boiled down and turned into syrup.
Sap fresh from the tree has only 2% sugar content.
It takes 50 gallons of sap to produce 1 gallon of maple syrup.
This is the liquid gold in the bottom of the vat after it is boiled down.
This is where the syrup comes out.
These are the spiles which are nailed into the tree and the bucket is hung from the hook on them.
This was The Blog Techs favorite part of this sugar shack. He had already eaten most of the maple syrup from this sunday. The wonderful people that own this shack give you big scoops of vanilla ice cream and let you top it with hot syrup from the warmer I showed you above. And BTW, this entire tour was free. Each shack we visited offered a feast of food, all made with maple syrup, all free! This shack also fed us pretzels with maple mustard, maple blondies and maple cookies
Comments
Thanks for sharing, love it.
When I was a kid growing up in Upstate NY, it was an annual event for my parent to take all 6 kids & drive over to VT to visit the sugar shacks. I still remember the little maple candies shaped like maple leaves the shack owner used to hand out along with maple cake donuts & hot apple cider. It's so nice to hear that sugar shack owners still carry on the tradition half a century later.
Very interesting and I'm looking forward to more :-)
Have a great day!
Christer.
I loved seeing this. I wish they sold log cabin syrup in the log cabin cans like they used to when I was little. LOVED those cans..
Nothing like real syrup.