VerHageFamily
03-18-2016, 10:20 AM
This was our first year tapping. After going skiing in Vermont last year and looking at all the taps it got my family thinking of tapping trees. My wife's has 50 acres in the Catskills and my grandfather has 80 acres in Orange County NY we thought of trying to tap. We marked out some trees in NY this past fall. However, life got ahead of us and I ordered supplies last and didn't tap until the 1st Saturday in March. We ended up putting 2 taps in a Norway maple that my wife's grandparents planted in their backyard (now our backyard) 60 years ago. Wow were we surprised at the production. Before the temps hit 70 degrees we collected about 7 1/2 gallons of sap. I tried to tap a silver maple in the backyard too but there was no flow.
This past weekend we boiled down the sap and got just under a pint of syrup. At least so I initially thought. As I was finishing the boil, I was watching the candy thermometer to make sure I didn't burn it. It hit about 220 degrees and went to a rapid boil as I was waiting for it to thicken a bit as I thought it was too fluid yet. I thought I burned in and was a little ticked. I filtered it and bottled anyway. On the second pot I let it hit the 220 mark but didn't keep it there as long. I then bottled the rest. My wife who works midnights came home in the morning and did a taste test. She liked the one that I thought I burned better. We have since boiled down the remaining syrup.
Now here's my question. At what point does the syrup become a little thicker? I know it won't be as thick as Log Cabin syrup since that is fake syrup. Am I supposed to bring it to that rapid boil point and hold for a bit until it thickens slightly?
Another question. With the 70 degree temp the tree stopped producing sap. With the snow coming this week and the night temps around freezing or below, do you think the tree will produce again?
All in all it was a great experience and we are prepared for next year. Our back yard backs up to a school yard and the teachers are getting curious. I see this being a school outing next year, which will be awesome.
This past weekend we boiled down the sap and got just under a pint of syrup. At least so I initially thought. As I was finishing the boil, I was watching the candy thermometer to make sure I didn't burn it. It hit about 220 degrees and went to a rapid boil as I was waiting for it to thicken a bit as I thought it was too fluid yet. I thought I burned in and was a little ticked. I filtered it and bottled anyway. On the second pot I let it hit the 220 mark but didn't keep it there as long. I then bottled the rest. My wife who works midnights came home in the morning and did a taste test. She liked the one that I thought I burned better. We have since boiled down the remaining syrup.
Now here's my question. At what point does the syrup become a little thicker? I know it won't be as thick as Log Cabin syrup since that is fake syrup. Am I supposed to bring it to that rapid boil point and hold for a bit until it thickens slightly?
Another question. With the 70 degree temp the tree stopped producing sap. With the snow coming this week and the night temps around freezing or below, do you think the tree will produce again?
All in all it was a great experience and we are prepared for next year. Our back yard backs up to a school yard and the teachers are getting curious. I see this being a school outing next year, which will be awesome.