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Thread: If you do everything right can you still end up with nitre?

  1. #11
    Join Date
    Mar 2016
    Location
    chester, ma
    Posts
    978

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    Quote Originally Posted by Swingpure View Post
    What is the “sweet”?
    As you boil you draw off finished syrup. Between boils the"sweet" remains in the pan(s).
    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

  2. #12
    Join Date
    Jan 2017
    Location
    Williston, VT
    Posts
    651

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    Quote Originally Posted by berkshires View Post
    As you boil you draw off finished syrup. Between boils the"sweet" remains in the pan(s).
    That's a good way to describe sweet.

    So with a filter press, you can use to clean the sweet left in your pan. You save the filtered sweet in a container while you clean your pans. Then on the next boil you start with clean sweet. The problem I've had with a small divided pan evaporator without a flue pan was the over cooking of the syrup which is due in part to the sludge and niter buildup that keeps cooking into the syrup.

    Another benefit of bigger production setups is the RO process which provides basic prefiltering to remove bark, sand, bugs, and stuff. On an operation without RO, filtering the sweet would be removing this objectional stuff.

    Ken
    Ken & Sherry
    Williston, VT
    16x34 Sugarhouse
    1,500 taps on high vacuum, Electric Releaser & CDL Sap Lifter
    Wood-Fired Leader 30"x10' Vortex Arch & Max Raised Flue with Rev Syrup Pan & CDL1200 RO
    https://www.facebook.com/pumpkinhillmaple/

  3. #13
    Join Date
    Jul 2021
    Location
    Parry Sound Area, Ontario
    Posts
    1,348

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    Quote Originally Posted by TapTapTap View Post
    That's a good way to describe sweet.

    So with a filter press, you can use to clean the sweet left in your pan. You save the filtered sweet in a container while you clean your pans. Then on the next boil you start with clean sweet. The problem I've had with a small divided pan evaporator without a flue pan was the over cooking of the syrup which is due in part to the sludge and niter buildup that keeps cooking into the syrup.

    Another benefit of bigger production setups is the RO process which provides basic prefiltering to remove bark, sand, bugs, and stuff. On an operation without RO, filtering the sweet would be removing this objectional stuff.

    Ken
    So if I remove all of the partially boiled sap from my steam pans into a 8 gallon stainless steel pot and refrigerate it over night, then clean the insides of the steam pans with hot water before I boil again, I should not have any issues?

  4. #14
    Join Date
    May 2015
    Location
    Vermont
    Posts
    208

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    Quote Originally Posted by Swingpure View Post
    So if I remove all of the partially boiled sap from my steam pans into a 8 gallon stainless steel pot and refrigerate it over night, then clean the insides of the steam pans with hot water before I boil again, I should not have any issues?
    With raw sap on this scale you will probably have no issues if leaving the sweet in the pans between boils maybe a mid season cleaning if it builds up but I doubt that will happen. In the end its really like hitting a moving target because sugar sand and niter are different in each region and each sap run so you just need to keep an eye on it. When you start to RO sap is when you will need to keep an even better eye on it because it gets 10 fold worse with sand and niter.

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