• stochastictrebuchet
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    98 months ago

    Out of curiosity, do you have to refine it somehow, or is it good to eat straight from the tree?

    • @Fondots
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      158 months ago

      I have no real firsthand experience making syrup, but one of my scout leaders years ago used to make his own so I picked up some bits and pieces from him.

      When it comes out of the tree, it’s very watery, I’ve never had the chance to try it myself but I’m told that it’s very refreshing, and I believe it’s actually lower in sugar than something like coconut water.

      Then you boil it down to concentrate it into a syrup.

      And as I understand it, that’s pretty much it, I suspect at some point it maybe goes through a sieve or a filter of some kind to catch any particulates that might be in there.

      I don’t know if it’s a common practice, but my scout leader had also rigged up a reverse osmosis system to cut down on how long he needed to boil it. Normally with a RO system, it puts out clean water and you throw away the concentrated waste product, but in his case the “waste” is what he wants, not quite syrup, but more concentrated maple water that requires less boiling to make syrup.

      • @Feathercrown
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        8 months ago

        RO systems are common for industrial sugaring but rare for hobbyists, mostly because they’re expensive and partially because they don’t provide as much of a benefit for the boiling time at a smaller scale (you still need to set aside a night to do it).

        • @Fondots
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          28 months ago

          That makes sense, he’s probably pretty much exactly on the line between a large-scale hobbyist and small industrial operation. He’s got a lot of property with a lot of trees to tap, but it’s pretty much just him and his family doing it all the work, and he does sell it but more as a side-gig than any serious source of income.

          I do remember him saying that it pretty significantly cut down on the amount of fuel he needed, but knowing him it’s probably just as likely that he did it because he thought it would be fun to tinker with an RO system than because of any savings.

          • @Feathercrown
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            28 months ago

            They are really fun to work with. Once you have the sap feeding into the RO machine then the evaporator with tubes you really feel like you have a little factory going!

    • @[email protected]
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      118 months ago

      Sap itself is essentially water. You probably… could just drink it alone but don’t. It’s weird and a little gross.

      You basically just pour it all in a vat and boil it down. It boils down at a 40:1 ratio. 40 gallons of sap is about one gallon of syrup.

      You just boil it until it reaches the correct sugar concentration, or until you’re pretty satisfied

        • @Feathercrown
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          8 months ago

          It’s not inedible but it certainly isn’t something I’d want to drink a lot of. It picks up all sorts of tastes from the tree and tubing and it doesn’t have the good caramel-analogous taste of syrup yet. It’s noticeably sweet though. Think sugar water with a hint of tree bark (which is basically what it is). I’d recommend tasting it once or twice if you haven’t for the novelty, but yeah it’s not very good unboiled.

        • @[email protected]
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          18 months ago

          I mean, I haven’t tried it in any significant quality, it’s incredibly close to normal water at that concentration. Maybe a bit woody, really not sweet.

          It’s also just unprocessed tree-water you get from a bucket and I’m not an expert on the health and safety of all that but yunno, to me it’s something I’d want at least boiled first.

          • @QuaternionsRock
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            18 months ago

            It didn’t seem that different from like… tree fruit juice, but based on some of the comments I’ve gotten, it doesn’t sound like it would be very pleasant.