WoodButcher
03-08-2011, 10:27 PM
ive made 5 gallons so far on my 2x4 flat pan , and all of it right from the start is medium and dark amber . its weird though ... it kinda has the candy sweet taste of light extra fancy , just dark in color .
the only thing im doing different this year is leaving the sweet in the pan overnight after boiling (since i usually boil 50 gallons at a time on weekdays) and then fire it up the next day and add fresh sap to start making a gradient and draw some syrup off by the end of the 2nd night . i know the longer you leave the sweet the darker it gets, but this is kind of drastic , no?
last year i made some nice real light amber from the same trees , but i drew off every night i boiled and finished on the turkey fryer . .. im avoiding that now and it works nice since i save on propane.
anyways , ive heard of several people around here getting a medium amber off the bat... anyone else?
im thinking its the snowmelt we got and the rain. . . dont get me wonrg, im not complaining.... it tastes phenomenal ! ;)
the only thing im doing different this year is leaving the sweet in the pan overnight after boiling (since i usually boil 50 gallons at a time on weekdays) and then fire it up the next day and add fresh sap to start making a gradient and draw some syrup off by the end of the 2nd night . i know the longer you leave the sweet the darker it gets, but this is kind of drastic , no?
last year i made some nice real light amber from the same trees , but i drew off every night i boiled and finished on the turkey fryer . .. im avoiding that now and it works nice since i save on propane.
anyways , ive heard of several people around here getting a medium amber off the bat... anyone else?
im thinking its the snowmelt we got and the rain. . . dont get me wonrg, im not complaining.... it tastes phenomenal ! ;)