ݺߣ

ݺߣShare a Scribd company logo
?
View of our Farm ENDLICH
100-year old barnand the farmers young wife
The sugar hut is about 1km along this path on snowshoes or by snow mobile
Typical Laurentian Mountains mixed forest
The maple grove on the hill side showing the tubes by which the maple water flows to the sugar hut (We have about 400 maples on tap)
The sugar hut at the bottom of the hill
A snowshoe Rabbit
End of March at the sugar hut
Our supply line:  Adrian with snow mobile and trailer
Terrie and Benji tapping a maple: 1- drill hole, 2 C tickle out chips with little branch, 3 C hammer in tap
Hand drill with lawn tractor-battery in backpack
Gun holster for drill
My helper Vincent, Frenchman & geographer.
Adrian and Gillian C the love birds.
Do these two like each other?
The collection tanks at the bottom of the hill
Some buckets around the hut  to taste a sip
Adrians friends from Torontoand their hard working women!
Fire wood to heat the evaporator
3-stage evaporator with steam condensation hood (the hut has neither power nor running water)
 in anticipation  of the first drop of syrup
Gillian draws and filters the first draft of syrup
The syrup is ready when the boiling point reaches107C
Filling it into cans
Sealing the cans
A Champagne Toast to the first harvest!
Now the heroes are tired
The final product (We made 200 of these in two weeks)
To make maple candy for the kids we heat the syrup to 118C where it caramelizes; then we drip it onto the snow and pick it up with a candy stick...yummmmi!
Typical maple season dinner at the farm: French pie soup, ham boiled in maple syrup, omelet with maple syrup, baked beans with maple syrup, maple sugar pie C you get the message?
Cheers  - once more!
My women and friends at the Lake House
Our Bec-fin in Ǵھ
The hut from up the hill, steaming away
Afternoon  sun at the maple grove
All this thanks to the sun: Her rays plus chlorophyll and water  makes the carbohydrates to grow, to be stored in the roots over winter, dead and frozen until spring, when the sun unfreezes the ground, turns the starch into sugar, sucks it up the tree,  so we can drill a hole, send it to our hut in the tubes,  boil the hell out of it, reduce it 35 : 1, put into cans  and offer you this gift from the sun!

More Related Content

Cabane sucre chez Schauer