buck3m
04-08-2006, 08:03 PM
I have a dream, and in that dream every bit of the syrup I can has absolutely no sugar sand in it.
I only made 35 gallons this year, and am just in it for the fun, and I find it very frustrating to find some sugar sand in my canned syrup half the time. Yes, I guess I don't need to can in glass.
Years ago we used the method of letting the finished syrup sit in a milk can for two weeks, then we'd pour off the top until we could see some sugar sand appear. We'd heat to 180+ and can. Seemed to work great.
Now, doing our best with muslin then paper filters then cone filters, it seems sand frequently sneaks in. It's a lot more work to filter, and it seems less effective for us.
Does anyone else use sedimentation instead of filtering? If so, how do you do it?
Personally, I'd much rather have slightly darker syrup from using sedimentation (then reheating to can), than lighter syrup with some sugar sand in it.
What do you think of letting the finished syrup settle in 5-gallon water cooler bottles?
Any other comments or ideas?
I only made 35 gallons this year, and am just in it for the fun, and I find it very frustrating to find some sugar sand in my canned syrup half the time. Yes, I guess I don't need to can in glass.
Years ago we used the method of letting the finished syrup sit in a milk can for two weeks, then we'd pour off the top until we could see some sugar sand appear. We'd heat to 180+ and can. Seemed to work great.
Now, doing our best with muslin then paper filters then cone filters, it seems sand frequently sneaks in. It's a lot more work to filter, and it seems less effective for us.
Does anyone else use sedimentation instead of filtering? If so, how do you do it?
Personally, I'd much rather have slightly darker syrup from using sedimentation (then reheating to can), than lighter syrup with some sugar sand in it.
What do you think of letting the finished syrup settle in 5-gallon water cooler bottles?
Any other comments or ideas?