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Thread: Letting syrup set to let niter settle?

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Dec 2019
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    Southwest Nebraska
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    59

    Default Letting syrup set to let niter settle?

    Does anyone here pour their finished syrup into a bucket or large container and let the syrup set a few days before syphoning off and reheating and run through a filter? My problem is I have very small batches of say maybe 4 pints at a shot. When I pour this little amount through my pre filters and Orlon filter, the syrup cools too quickly, won't go through and I'm stuck with either reheating the syrup and re pouring or losing an important amount in the filter. My idea is to pour the unfiltered syrup straight into a large vessel, let the sediment sit for a few days, reheat, and pour through the filters.

    Jim
    Home made 2' X 5' X 6" pan.
    Home made 500 gallon wood fired cooker
    2019 - 12 taps, 1/2 gallon Box Elder syrup
    2020 - 120 taps ………..
    This hobby is addicting...…..

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Mar 2016
    Location
    chester, ma
    Posts
    978

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    I take my syrup off the evaporator before it's quite done, and put it in containers to settle in the fridge for a few days. I dump the sludge, and then finish it and bottle using a coffee urn with my filters.

    GO
    2016: Homemade arch from old wood stove; 2 steam tray pans; 6 taps; 1.1 gal
    2017: 15 taps; 4.5 gal
    2018: 12 taps and short season; 2.2 gal
    2019: 7 taps and a short season; 1.8 gals
    2020: New Mason 2x3 XL evaporator halfway through season; 9 taps 2 gals
    2021: Same Mason 2x3, 18 taps, 4.5 gals
    2022: 23 taps, 5.9 gals
    2023: 23 taps. Added AUF, 13.2 gals (too much sap!)
    2024: 17 taps, 5.3 gall
    2025: 17 taps, 4-5 gall
    All on buckets

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Jan 2008
    Location
    Hopkinton, MA
    Posts
    1,824

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    Quote Originally Posted by Jim Foster View Post
    Does anyone here pour their finished syrup into a bucket or large container and let the syrup set a few days before syphoning off and reheating and run through a filter? My problem is I have very small batches of say maybe 4 pints at a shot. When I pour this little amount through my pre filters and Orlon filter, the syrup cools too quickly, won't go through and I'm stuck with either reheating the syrup and re pouring or losing an important amount in the filter. My idea is to pour the unfiltered syrup straight into a large vessel, let the sediment sit for a few days, reheat, and pour through the filters.

    Jim
    That is a perfectly acceptable and efficient method to keep from losing syrup in the filtering process. Are you sugaring in southwest Nebraska? Is that a county in New York?
    Woodville Maples
    www.woodvillemaples.com
    www.facebook.com/woodvillemaples
    Around 300 taps on tubing, 25+ on buckets if I put them out
    Mix of natural and mechanical vac, S3 Controller from Mountain Maple
    2x6 W.F. Mason with Phaneuf pans
    Deer Run 250 RO
    Ford F350
    6+ hives of bees (if they make it through the winters)
    Keeping the day job until I can start living the dream.

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
    Location
    mauston Wi
    Posts
    424

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    you can leave syrup settle for as long as you want..pour off when it has settled out..combine the dreges and let that settle out also

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Mar 2011
    Location
    Louisville, Kentucky
    Posts
    215

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    Quote Originally Posted by Jim Foster View Post
    Does anyone here pour their finished syrup into a bucket or large container and let the syrup set a few days before syphoning off and reheating and run through a filter? My problem is I have very small batches of say maybe 4 pints at a shot. When I pour this little amount through my pre filters and Orlon filter, the syrup cools too quickly, won't go through and I'm stuck with either reheating the syrup and re pouring or losing an important amount in the filter. My idea is to pour the unfiltered syrup straight into a large vessel, let the sediment sit for a few days, reheat, and pour through the filters.

    Jim
    I think this works well for smaller batches of syrup. It reduces the amount lost through traditional filtering. Just takes a little more time.
    Dave Barker
    2014 30 taps, steam tray pans
    2015 ~100 taps, in conjunction with University of Louisville
    2x5 Smoky Lake hybrid pan
    2022 150 taps

  6. #6
    Join Date
    May 2006
    Location
    New Hartford, N.Y.
    Posts
    2,115

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    That's how my father and I did it years ago. We would let the syrup set for a quite a while and then pour off 98% of it, leaving the sugar sand behind.

    Years ago, every sugar maker had a device called a settling tank for doing just that. Syrup would get drawn off or poured through cheesecloth, old fabric, etc. to catch the "big stuff" and then they would let the rest settle out.
    2014 Upgrades!: 24x40 sugarhouse & 30"x10' Lapierre welded pans, wood fired w/ forced draft, homemade hood & preheater
    400 taps- half on gravity 5/16, half on gravity 3/16
    Airablo R.O. machine - in the house basement!
    Ford F-350 4x4 sap gatherer
    An assortment of barrels, cage tanks & bulk tanks- with one operational for cooling/holding concentrate
    And a few puzzled neighbors...

    http://s606.photobucket.com/albums/t...uckethead1920/

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Feb 2017
    Location
    Central Wisconsin
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    429

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    Quote Originally Posted by Dave Puhl View Post
    you can leave syrup settle for as long as you want..pour off when it has settled out..combine the dredges and let that settle out also
    That's exactly what I do, If I don't have 5 gallons to finish off I wait until I do, Crazy amount of settlings. On the last finishing / bottling of the year i use half of the dredge that is clear, the rest goes for the bears.
    1960 - 1970s 70 taps on galvanized buckets with Dad and Grandpa.
    1970s - 1985 Acted crazy!
    1986 - 2005 20-30 buckets.
    2006- 2017 70 buckets and bags
    2017-2019 100 bags and buckets
    2020 Finally retired!!! 75 buckets, 50-75 on tubing. RO Bucket, New 12 X 16 Shack and a 42X42 flat pan.
    2021-Adding another 125 taps along with a second RO bucket.
    2022- Shooting for 350 taps, with 100 on lines.
    Lots of Family and Friends and dogs named Skyy and Nessy!

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