At barely 10:00 am, The Blog Tech and his fiance at their first maple sundae of the day. She decided right then and there that this was the best festival in the world.
You can see all of the wood in the back which they use in the burner. |
The buckets are covered with metal caps.
These shacks are out in the middle of nowhere but they are easy to find because you just look for the smoke.
This is the sap boiling in the unit. They told us that this year it took them 100 gallons of sap to make 1 gallon of syrup.
Then we were off to another one.
This place, like most of the shacks now, collect sap through a tube system.
All of the shacks lay out a spread similar to this. This whole thing is free. They offer huge varieties of food made with maple syrup. The Blog Tech and his fiance were more than happy to sample as much as they could. We had some truly remarkable food yesterday the most interesting being a maple cheese spread. It consisted of velvetta cheese, butter, confectioners sugar and maple syrup. It sounds disgusting but it about brought me to my knees it was so good. And no, it did not taste the tiniest bit like velvetta. I have hundreds of photos to sort through today and I'll show more tomorrow.
Comments
100 gallons for one gallon, wow,, usually its 40 to one!!!
must have been weak sap!
Maybe the strange winter?
The Sugar Maple doesn't do well here so no chance to see that in live here. Some however do the same with Birches but they only sell birch syrup to restaurants. I really need to let a birch grow up in my garden :-)
Have a great day!
Christer.
BTW, I even used half maple syrup and half honey to make a lemon curd recently. Delicious!