Monday, March 16, 2026

Maple Syrup Time

 It's maple syrup time in Michigan. When the days are what we consider warm but the nights still are cold the sap flows back up to feed the trees.  If a tree is particularly juicy it will seep out of the space where the branches meet the tree. Always in March but sometimes in late February.  

When our daughter moved into their house one spring they noticed squirrels laying on those branches and licking the dark spaces at the junctures.  

The next year she found a place that sold spigots and buckets and watched the squirrels. 





It tastes, straight from the tree, like water with a "what's that?" background.  I think you can taste the tree if you wait for it. The sap drips drip by drop into the bucket.  Somedays the bucket will be quite full, other days not so much.
Then you cook it down.  Those two pots in the background are used up and dead to the chore. The propane goes fast, the little stove wore out.  She's been doing this for years.  With the new open cook pot more will evaporate quicker.  You can see it's starting to change color as the sap boils down.  

It takes about forty gallons of sap to get one gallon of syrup. This is the real thing, no additives, preservatives, sugars, nothing but cooked down sap.  And better eating you won't find! 

9 comments:

  1. That’s a lot of work. I’m sure it tastes amazing

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  2. my sis in law in maine says warmer temps halted sap running....so will have to buy my own this year i guess...

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  3. I grew up not far from a big operation, saw the lines and buckets when we drove by, but I don't think it's there any more... There was even a building where they boiled the sap down. And now the hubby has friends tapping their trees...the one guy is the definition of ADHD, so we get some interesting stories!

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  4. I’ve read about the process, but didn’t realise that so much sap was needed to make the syrup. Thanks for giving us an insight.

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  5. Wow - I often learn interesting things here...no wonder its a bit pricey! I didn't realises it got "cooked"

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  6. Thanks for telling us how the process works, yay for the squirrels!!

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  7. the first time i tasted Real Maple Syrup i couldn't believe how incredibly delicious it is - the guy who shared it was new to colorado and found out that he could make some Real Money selling Real Syrup to the rest of us ... sigh ... he's one of the few people who i miss from Corporate America ... well, maybe not HIM, but i miss his access to Real Maple Syrup ... i'll never settle for Mrs. Butterworth again.

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  8. Oh I do love maple syrup. It’s so cool how it just runs out of the tree like that

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  9. So good to learn about how to make the syrup.

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