Lots of people bring their brix up into the 20's and 30's before boiling. It all depends on the quality of your process and RO. I personally bring my sap up to between 10-15% before I start boiling after I run it through my RO.
I dont know how many gallons you are talking about or how fast an RO bucket works. You can certainly recirculate your concentrated sap back into your original container and keep running it until you get the desired brix you are looking for. Most smaller producers recirculate to some extent to get their sap where they want it.
Freezing it helps to remove water. Some people refuse to do that because they feel they are losing some sugar. To each his own on that one. Many people have test5ed the ice, some find 0% sugar, others find a little. Depending on your quantity of sap, and ice, and ability to boil dictates how far you want to go with saving your ice.
Originally Posted by
edward
After maple season I am going to try and make birch syrup. Given the significantly lower sugar content of birch sap, I want to consider a couple methods to increase the sugar content. Basically, I am trying to find out how to maximize the sugar content of the sap and thereby minimize the boiling needed.
Maybe this is a stupid question, but if I use an RO (e.g. RO bucket) there is a sap input and two outputs, one for water and the other for concentrated sap. Should the concentrated sap go into a separate container or feed it back into the sap input container?
If I capture the concentrated sap into a separate container and then repeat the process, how many times can I pass the sap concentrate through the RO before it stops extracting water? In other words, what is the maximum sugar content that can be achieved using an RO?
When maple sap partially freezes, it is my understanding that the hunk of ice floating in the bucket is just frozen water and the sugar is left in the bucket. Although birch season is when nighttime temps are above freezing, I might have access to a freezer. After I maximize sugar content to the greatest extent possible with an RO, would I be able to increase the sugar content further by partially freezing the concentrated sap and scooping out the precipitated ice?
Is there anything else I can do to extract water from the sap and thereby increase the sugar content before I boil?
Thank you
Edward
Massachusetts
2021: 12 taps on buckets (1 tap per tree)
200 gallons of sap (had to toss 40 gallons)
4-compartment evaporator (17”x23”)
4 gallons of syrup
2022 4x40" RO, Welch 1397 Vac Pump, 3 Guzzler Pumps, Lapierre Releaser, 1100 taps
2021 Twin Baby Boys, Close to 650 taps
2020 Upgraded RO to 2 post and 7GBS Pump. 265 taps
2019 Smoky Lake 2x6 raised flue, Autodraw system, Maple Jet Filter Press, a beautiful new bride to be my sugaring partner :-)
2017 Expanded Sugar Shack, new 2x6 with float box, NEXTgen Maple RO, 250+ taps, still on sap sacks
2016 Sugar Shack, 2x6 evaporator, 160 taps, all on Sap Sacks
2014 110 taps
2013 35 taps