SAP PROCESSING
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Eric Randall of Randle's Maple Products
in Alexander stokes the fire
of his wood-burning evaporator. |
The
sweet process of turning sap to syrup happens in a sugarhouse. But this
sugarhouse is quite different from the one Hansel and Gretel happened
upon – a fully equipped sugarhouse contains a great deal of equipment,
including a storage tank, an evaporator, a readily accessible fuel
supply, and perhaps modern technologies such as a reverse osmosis,
preheating, or vapor compression systems. Other items include facilities
to store and package syrup, and perhaps a kitchen for production of
other products such as maple candy.
Traditionally, wood was used to fuel the evaporators to produce maple
syrup. Wood fires created a homey atmosphere that many maple producers
believe is part of the perfect maple experience. And wood is easily
available as a fuel, aiding in forest management when diseased and
fallen trees are used. But most wood-fired evaporators are inefficient
compared to modern evaporators powered by other fuels. It takes one full
cord of wood (128 cubic feet) to produce approximately 25 gallons of
syrup.
It takes time to make maple syrup. Water is removed from the sap by
heating it, concentrating its sugar from two percent to approximately
66%. In modern evaporators, sap flows into a “sap pan” and is heated,
allowing evaporation. Then the concentrated sap flows into a “syrup pan”
for finishing. The finishing pan typically is an open-topped large pan
heated from below. It allows a controlled removal of syrup as it reaches
the final stages of processing, creating higher-grade, uniform syrup.
Most
commercial operations rely on hydrometers or refractometers to
accurately assess sugar concentration. Non-commercial operators may use
“sheeting”, a process that takes a flat edge scoop and dips and removes
it from the nearly-finished sap. The flat edge sheds the syrup in
“sheets” if it has reached the correct sugar concentration.
Commercial producers often store syrup in 30-gallon drums during the
production season. Syrup in drums can be sold in bulk to various outlets
or repackaged by the producer into smaller containers.
Before packaging, maple syrup is filtered to remove precipitates that
form during processing. After filtering, syrup is graded according to
the amount of light passing through it.

Kim Drew of Indian Acre's Maple
Farm
in Darien checks on the maple sap as it boils into syrup.
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