The document describes maple syrup production at a farm in the Laurentian Mountains. It shows the 100-year old barn, sugar hut located 1km away in the forest, and the 400 maple trees tapped for sap. Pictures show the tapping process, collection tanks, 3-stage evaporator used to boil the sap down into syrup, and the finished syrup being canned. The farm produces 200 cans of syrup over two weeks each season, and the syrup is used to flavor many foods at the typical maple season dinner.
30. 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!
31. 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?
37. 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!