tbear
02-25-2023, 10:20 AM
Hey Everyone,
I experienced something I've not seen before. I boil on a flat 2x5 Smoky Lake pan and corsair arch with a blower. I collected 200 gallons of older sap, it was crystal clear and tasted good as it had been frozen in the buckets most of the time. I boiled off 75 gallon the first day, it was little foamy which I suspected had to do with age, no biggie. The next day I went about boiling off the remaining 125 gallons. Here's what would happen: The timer would go off, I'd hit the blower switch, open the fire door and load it, hit the blower switch and reset the timer, by that time the boil would be trying to climb out of the pan! No, not just a little, it'd actually be at the top of the pan ready to spill over! There were a couple of times I had to open the fire door just to keep it from boiling over! So every six minutes (my firing schedule) I'd experience ten seconds of terror! It was not a fun day.
It wasn't the kind of foam that I'd skim out, the bubbles were small and filled with steam which makes me think it was the boil and not the foamy sap. I'd think it was close to syrup but I run the pan at one inch which keeps about 10 gallons of liquid in the pan so at 200 gallons there'd only be 5 gallons +- of syrup in the pan at the end of the boil. I was glad when that day was over. Anyone have any thoughts on why this might have happened? Thanks, Ted
I experienced something I've not seen before. I boil on a flat 2x5 Smoky Lake pan and corsair arch with a blower. I collected 200 gallons of older sap, it was crystal clear and tasted good as it had been frozen in the buckets most of the time. I boiled off 75 gallon the first day, it was little foamy which I suspected had to do with age, no biggie. The next day I went about boiling off the remaining 125 gallons. Here's what would happen: The timer would go off, I'd hit the blower switch, open the fire door and load it, hit the blower switch and reset the timer, by that time the boil would be trying to climb out of the pan! No, not just a little, it'd actually be at the top of the pan ready to spill over! There were a couple of times I had to open the fire door just to keep it from boiling over! So every six minutes (my firing schedule) I'd experience ten seconds of terror! It was not a fun day.
It wasn't the kind of foam that I'd skim out, the bubbles were small and filled with steam which makes me think it was the boil and not the foamy sap. I'd think it was close to syrup but I run the pan at one inch which keeps about 10 gallons of liquid in the pan so at 200 gallons there'd only be 5 gallons +- of syrup in the pan at the end of the boil. I was glad when that day was over. Anyone have any thoughts on why this might have happened? Thanks, Ted