Made my first batch of maple cream yesterday. Think it might be just a little thin. What should the texture and thickness be when you take it straight from the fridge?
IMG_4722.jpg
Made my first batch of maple cream yesterday. Think it might be just a little thin. What should the texture and thickness be when you take it straight from the fridge?
IMG_4722.jpg
Page Meadow Maple
Lowell, Maine
Leader Half Pint evaporator
80 taps: 53 buckets, 27 drop lines
Russ
"Red Roof Maples" Where the term "boiling soda" was first introduced to the maple world!
1930 Ford Model AA Doodlebug tractor
A couple of Honda 4 wheelers
Four chainsaws and no chickens!
It is a good idea to have syrup ready to add to the cream to thin it back out if it turns too fast for your processing speed. It doesn't need to be hot. I had to do that once. I think the hardest part about cream is learning what your boiling temperature is for your syrup and stove your doing it on.
Jared
Good idea to have syrup ready to add to the cream to thin it back out if it turns too fast for your processing speed. It does not need to be hot. I had to do that once a time.
It took me a year and about 12 batches to almost figure out. Last 3 batches are good. I stir in a kitchen aid with whisk at 95 degrees. Used paddle on earlier batches very grainy, whisk seems to have fixed that. I mist with water when it get too thick. All about temp at your location, if to hard or thick try heating to 2 or 3 degrees less. Keep a good notebook so you know what temps work for you.
54 Acres bought in Sept 2010, hope for a lot of fun
Kabota 3400 w/ bucket
couple Husky chainsaws and a couple of Stihl
Big dream
2011 = 106 on gravity tubing, 100 bucket
2012 =700 vaccuum 100 gravity 80 bucket's
30" x 12' Vortex with Leader Revolution Max Raised pans
2013 = 1200 vac, 200 gravity, 5 buckets, buying from 300 buckets, 500 vac
Springtech RO 600 Deluxe
2015= 1800 all vac @ home, buying sap from 1200.
2017= 2200 all on vac. no longer buying sap