Had to clean the evaporator after each of my last two boils
I am getting a build up in the draw of section of my syrup pan and have had to clean it off after each of the last two boils. Yesterday there was quite a bit of niter in the flu pan, but I did not notice a lot of niter on the previous boil. I usually only clean the pan once or twice at the end of the season. I am boiling on a D&G wood fired 30" x 8' evaporator. Is my syrup pan getting bad, bad depth when boiling, foaming too much, making too heavy syrup? I would like to prevent this extra work. Suggestions.
TedA from the cordwood sugarshack in Northern Wisconsin
My comments below are most applicable for hobby size cookers with a drop flue pans. I have Smokey Lake 2x4 drop flue pan. The first few seasons that I had it, I only cleaned it at the end of the season - after 4-5 weeks of use. By then a solid layer of sand/nitre had built us and coated the bottom of the front compartment. Not good. After that, I cleaned the pan 2-3 times per season. This year, I'm less than two weeks into the season and I have already drained it once and cleaned it inside and out - seems to really improve the boil. However, this season, it seems to need cleaning after every 2-3 boils. The cleaning process - removing the float box, draining the pan, removing/flushing/cleaning is a chore so I have considered alternatives and came up with the following.
Since most of the sediment is accumulating in the front two compartments rather than the flue part of the pan, I just clean those front compartments. To do that, I plug the opening from the flue part to the front part, tip the back of the pan up 3-4 inches and then open the front valve. Virtually all the near syrup in the front two compartments drains out (into a filter covered bucket). Then I flush and brush the front two compartments with hot water. Drainage goes into a slop bucket and gets tossed. Once the front two compartments are clean, I remove the blocks in back (lower the pan to level), replace the near syrup that was drained out and remove the plug between the flue section and front section and I'm ready to go. Following this system gets rid of a lot of sediment early, helps the boil and allows me to avoid having to totally drain and remove remove the pan from the arch. It is still some extra work but I can clean the front two compartments in less that 1/2 hour.