buck3m
04-02-2006, 10:31 AM
First off, I was delighted to find this site! I've learned a lot already.
We made maple syrup here on the family farm in Minnesota, on a small hobby scale, for 10 years or so, and then got away from it for 20 years. Now we're back!
This year we finished 4 batches totaling about 35 gallons of syrup. We filter hot syrup through two layers of muslin, then through a paper prefilter, then through an Orlon cone filter. During the final filter it's still about 160 degrees.
Now I notice that a couple of batches have sediment in them and I was completely baffled. After reading through a bunch of posts, I'm thinking it's sugar crystals and not sugar sand. The sugar sand we filtered out was very dark, and this sediment is light colored.
I tested using a hydrometer, with a small "winging it" factor. I pulled it out of the main pan just before it tested exactly right to allow for the voluminous steam resulting from all the filtering and reheating to canning temperature of about 185. I didn't do a final test because I didn't want to bring it all the way up to boiling again.
Do you folks think it's sugar crystals instead of sugar sand?
How best should the syrup we've already bottled be handled? (We sell mostly quarts and pints to friends, but had hoped to sell some to local stores.)
Will the syrup crystalize more?
Can the crystals be settled out?
How can we prevent this from happening again?
Thanks!
We made maple syrup here on the family farm in Minnesota, on a small hobby scale, for 10 years or so, and then got away from it for 20 years. Now we're back!
This year we finished 4 batches totaling about 35 gallons of syrup. We filter hot syrup through two layers of muslin, then through a paper prefilter, then through an Orlon cone filter. During the final filter it's still about 160 degrees.
Now I notice that a couple of batches have sediment in them and I was completely baffled. After reading through a bunch of posts, I'm thinking it's sugar crystals and not sugar sand. The sugar sand we filtered out was very dark, and this sediment is light colored.
I tested using a hydrometer, with a small "winging it" factor. I pulled it out of the main pan just before it tested exactly right to allow for the voluminous steam resulting from all the filtering and reheating to canning temperature of about 185. I didn't do a final test because I didn't want to bring it all the way up to boiling again.
Do you folks think it's sugar crystals instead of sugar sand?
How best should the syrup we've already bottled be handled? (We sell mostly quarts and pints to friends, but had hoped to sell some to local stores.)
Will the syrup crystalize more?
Can the crystals be settled out?
How can we prevent this from happening again?
Thanks!