Andy VT
07-07-2022, 10:41 PM
Has anyone tried boiling sap over a Solo Stove? (A stainless steel secondary-burn fire pit)
I don't think I'd buy one for the express purpose of boiling sap, but since I have one anyway (Yukon model), and it is quite smoke-less, I can't help but wonder what it could do under a pan large enough to handle the flame.
Today I jury-rigged a stand and put a 12"x20"x4" hotel pan full to the brim with water and it boiled hard in 15 minutes from cold.
But the hotel pan would be too small for sap. Flames go around the sides and I'm pretty sure it would scorch.
So, since I expect to be a batch boiler for the forseeable future, not having the undistracted time to achieve or maintain a gradient, I'm considering getting a 2x2 or 2x3 flat pan with or without dividers and supporting it somehow to slide the Yukon under it.
Has anyone here already invented this wheel?
Last year I ran 3 hotel pans on 3 coleman liquid-fuel two-burner stoves burning gasoline outside and then finished in the kitchen. It worked fine for 9 taps but would have worked better when gasoline was cheaper! It was fun to have an excuse to operate those stoves. But I'm expanding this year, plus that setup would only be viable with considerably lower gasoline prices.
Anyone got a 2x2 or 2x3 pan for sale not too crazy far from Essex Junction, VT for this slightly embarrassing experiment? This is a case where a bit of warp may not be a biggie.
Side-note: the topic of "air-over-fire" has come up quite a bit. Is this a form of secondary burn?
Andy
I don't think I'd buy one for the express purpose of boiling sap, but since I have one anyway (Yukon model), and it is quite smoke-less, I can't help but wonder what it could do under a pan large enough to handle the flame.
Today I jury-rigged a stand and put a 12"x20"x4" hotel pan full to the brim with water and it boiled hard in 15 minutes from cold.
But the hotel pan would be too small for sap. Flames go around the sides and I'm pretty sure it would scorch.
So, since I expect to be a batch boiler for the forseeable future, not having the undistracted time to achieve or maintain a gradient, I'm considering getting a 2x2 or 2x3 flat pan with or without dividers and supporting it somehow to slide the Yukon under it.
Has anyone here already invented this wheel?
Last year I ran 3 hotel pans on 3 coleman liquid-fuel two-burner stoves burning gasoline outside and then finished in the kitchen. It worked fine for 9 taps but would have worked better when gasoline was cheaper! It was fun to have an excuse to operate those stoves. But I'm expanding this year, plus that setup would only be viable with considerably lower gasoline prices.
Anyone got a 2x2 or 2x3 pan for sale not too crazy far from Essex Junction, VT for this slightly embarrassing experiment? This is a case where a bit of warp may not be a biggie.
Side-note: the topic of "air-over-fire" has come up quite a bit. Is this a form of secondary burn?
Andy