Learn How to Make Maple Syrup

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Store-bought brands cannot beat the delicous taste of real, pure maple syrup over a stack of steaming hotcakes.
Store-bought brands cannot beat the delicous taste of real, pure maple syrup over a stack of steaming hotcakes.
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Sap is extracted from the sugar maple by
Sap is extracted from the sugar maple by "tapping", which means boring a hole in the trunk of the tree to cause a flow of juice.

One winter day I was splitting logs in the backyard when a man drove up to make a delivery. He looked at the not inconsiderable pile of fuel and said, “What’s all this wood for?”

“In a couple of weeks I’ll be using it to make maple syrup,” I told him.

My visitor thought a moment and then asked, “What do you want to go to all that trouble for? You can get syrup in the stores.”

“‘I just do it for fun,” I said . . . and the delivery man shook his head and climbed into his truck. He probably went away puzzling, the way the hired man in Frost’s poem puzzled over the college boy’s remark that he “studied Latin like the violin/ because he liked it”.

All the same, the reason I gave the curious driver was the truth. It isn’t the demands of a sweet tooth or a desire to make money that moves me to tap the maple trees when spring arrives. It’s rather a response to an impulse like the one that prompts the Canada goose to lift from the waters of the Mississippi Delta country and wing his way to the breeding grounds around Hudson Bay. Perhaps what drives me is an elemental instinct to produce with my own labor something from the riches of the good earth.

  • Published on Jan 1, 1975
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