MAPLE SUGAR
FACTS ABOUT THE MAKING
OF MAPLE SUGAR 1886
The first run sap will
make the best sugar, it takes 16 quarts of sap to make a pound
of sugar. To “let”
the sap you bore a ¼ inch diameter into the maple tree a
inch and
a half. A sugar maple
tree needs to be at least 15 years old until it is tapped.
The best sugar is light
brown and syrup is amber color.
Use “spouts” of
metal, tin pails with tops, vats of wood for holding with tops to
keep out
rain and almost everything
else. Boil the sap in iron potash pots set over a brick arch
with the fire. This fire
archway is said best to be on the southern side of a hill, with a
running brook at the foot
of the hill . Now you need an evaporator and “ sugaring off “
pan. The evaporator is a
long shallow iron pans with dividers over a fire. The sap,
strained three times, slowly proceeds as it boils, at 300 degree,
for twenty minutes to the final divider and is now syrup that
weighs 11 pounds per gallon. Here for syrup the product is drawn
off
and strained , set off
side to cool before going into gallon cans . For sugar it goes
into the
“sugaringoff pans” at
a high temperature of 400 degree until it forms in to crystals and
then
packed it tin cans.
Abstract: Northumberland,
Pennsylvania, Public Press , Friday, May 21, 1886.
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