SeanD
03-31-2008, 07:31 PM
My first year making syrup using a wash tub literally on top of an open hole with a fire in it, I was able to make a batch of the lightest, sweetest stuff I had ever tasted, followed by a dark amber batch, and finished the season with a batch of B.
Last year, I upgraded my setup with a SS flat pan set up on blocks and vented through a stack in the back and got two batches of Dark Amber. This year I upgraded further by tightening up the front with a door, making a simple preheater, adding two steam pans as syrup pans, ladling my way over, and ladling off near-finished syrup over the course of the boils. Yet, this year I produced nothing but Grade B syrup from my first to my last batch. Nothing lighter, nothing darker. All delicious, but a rich mahogany color.
What gives? The sap through the entire season was a consistent 2.3%. I had never tested it in previous seasons. How much of this is "take what the trees give you" and how much is technique? If it is mostly technique, I've got to get another wash tub!
Sean
Last year, I upgraded my setup with a SS flat pan set up on blocks and vented through a stack in the back and got two batches of Dark Amber. This year I upgraded further by tightening up the front with a door, making a simple preheater, adding two steam pans as syrup pans, ladling my way over, and ladling off near-finished syrup over the course of the boils. Yet, this year I produced nothing but Grade B syrup from my first to my last batch. Nothing lighter, nothing darker. All delicious, but a rich mahogany color.
What gives? The sap through the entire season was a consistent 2.3%. I had never tested it in previous seasons. How much of this is "take what the trees give you" and how much is technique? If it is mostly technique, I've got to get another wash tub!
Sean