Dinorocks
02-12-2021, 02:32 PM
I have been collecting and boiling sap from about 70 maple trees in the woods about ¼ mile from my house for several years and have reached a “ceiling” in my boiling efficiency. I was hoping I could explain my procedures and possibly get some ideas from those more experienced to maximize my “backyard operation” this season.
I typically boil when I collect about 250 gallons of sap, and usually boil three times a season (the sap is stored in food-grade drums packed in ice). I boil sap in a 42” by 24” SS pan that is 8” deep, over a wood fire (split ash wood) lined with firebrick. The pan can hold 35 gallons (if filled to the top) and each inch of liquid is equal to 4.4 gallons. I use two 5-gallon SS surge milking containers to pre-heat sap which I then I use to feed the main pan as needed. The sugar content in my sap varies from about 1.5% to 3.5%, and I typically get 5 gallons of syrup from the 250 gallons of sap I boil (50:1). I start my boil with 20 gallons in the pan (4.5” of sap in pan) and use a ruler to monitor the depth to determine when to add additional sap. It takes me about 1 hour to evaporate 10 gallons of sap from my main pan at a level of 3” to 5”. I transfer one 5 gallons warming pots of boiling sap into the pan every ½ hour. Once I have boiled the 250 gallons of sap, I boil the nearup to 10 gallons (2.25” in main pan) before I remove the pan from the fire and filter/transfer back into the two 5-gallon SS surge milking containers to finish boil at the house where I can better control the final temperature. I would finish boil the 10 gallons of nearup to 5 gallons of syrup.
This year I will be using an RO bucket, capable of concentrating 10 gallons of sap per hour (I will get 25 gallons of concentrated sap from 50 gallons of unprocessed sap) and plan to only add concentrated sap to my boiling pan this season. Is it accurate to assume that I will still evaporate at the same rate I typically do as described above with concentrated sap as I did with unconcentrated sap?
And will the evaporation time increase/decrease with higher/lower volume of sap in the pan? That is, would I evaporate faster with 3” of sap in the pan compared to 6” in the pan? Its easier and less risky for me to maximize the amount of sap in the pan.
Thank you for reading the above and thank you in advance for any suggestions!
Dino
Western New York
2193321937219342193521936
I typically boil when I collect about 250 gallons of sap, and usually boil three times a season (the sap is stored in food-grade drums packed in ice). I boil sap in a 42” by 24” SS pan that is 8” deep, over a wood fire (split ash wood) lined with firebrick. The pan can hold 35 gallons (if filled to the top) and each inch of liquid is equal to 4.4 gallons. I use two 5-gallon SS surge milking containers to pre-heat sap which I then I use to feed the main pan as needed. The sugar content in my sap varies from about 1.5% to 3.5%, and I typically get 5 gallons of syrup from the 250 gallons of sap I boil (50:1). I start my boil with 20 gallons in the pan (4.5” of sap in pan) and use a ruler to monitor the depth to determine when to add additional sap. It takes me about 1 hour to evaporate 10 gallons of sap from my main pan at a level of 3” to 5”. I transfer one 5 gallons warming pots of boiling sap into the pan every ½ hour. Once I have boiled the 250 gallons of sap, I boil the nearup to 10 gallons (2.25” in main pan) before I remove the pan from the fire and filter/transfer back into the two 5-gallon SS surge milking containers to finish boil at the house where I can better control the final temperature. I would finish boil the 10 gallons of nearup to 5 gallons of syrup.
This year I will be using an RO bucket, capable of concentrating 10 gallons of sap per hour (I will get 25 gallons of concentrated sap from 50 gallons of unprocessed sap) and plan to only add concentrated sap to my boiling pan this season. Is it accurate to assume that I will still evaporate at the same rate I typically do as described above with concentrated sap as I did with unconcentrated sap?
And will the evaporation time increase/decrease with higher/lower volume of sap in the pan? That is, would I evaporate faster with 3” of sap in the pan compared to 6” in the pan? Its easier and less risky for me to maximize the amount of sap in the pan.
Thank you for reading the above and thank you in advance for any suggestions!
Dino
Western New York
2193321937219342193521936