maple syrup, sugar shack season

Thursday, 7 April 2016
Spring in Canada: maple syrup, sugar shack season and a recipe for
maple taffy on snow
In Canada, the second largest country in the world, much of it uninhabited, winter
lasts six months. It's brutal. In many areas of Quebec, snow is 2m high. In Montreal,
to deal with temperatures of minus 30 - described by one inhabitant as 'so cold your
face is pinched by the air' - they have a subterranean version of the town, bright with
high ceilings, a subway system, with lifts to apartments and office buildings, and
extensive shopping facilities and restaurants. Citizens can virtually live underground
throughout winter and need never see daylight.
A maple syrup farmer told me: 'If the weather is above zero, you're outside in a Tshirt'. Canadians are hardy, but get desperate for sun. By February, many have had enough.
Spring is important in most cultures but has a special significance in Canada. Maple
syrup season represents spring, growth, renewal and survival.
The History
Maple syrup is a food discovered by the indigenous people, the First Nations of
Canada. They taught settlers, deprived of vitamin C and suffering from scurvy after
the long sea journey and the winter diet of cured meats, how to collect sap from
maple trees and how to boil it down to a sugar syrup.
There are many myths as to how maple syrup was discovered. The most popular is
that a hunter shot an arrow into a tree and water poured out from the hole. The
original method of tapping a tree was to slash it and use a reed to guide the water
into a bucket made of bark or wood.
The native tradition of making maple syrup entailed hollowing out sections of tree
trunk as a container for the water. Stones were heated up in the fire and dropped into
the log to evaporate and concentrate the water. This was repeated until the water
became sweet. The water only has 2% sugar when it comes out of the tree. You need
40 litres of maple water to make one litre of maple syrup.
So it is a time consuming business, and must have been even more so in those days.
As Richard Berring ofWhite Meadows farm in Ontario explained: 'It would have
taken seven days to make the same amount we now make in an hour'.
From 1536, early travellers mentioned the sugar maple tree and how the water tasted
like good wine. Swedish biologist Peter Kalm, in 1756, attested to the health and
energy giving properties of maple sugar.
In 1790, anti-slavery abolitionists supported the use of maple sugar as an
alternative to cane sugar grown by slaves. Maple sugar was sold in loaves rather than
as syrup.
By mid-19th century, metal taps and aluminium buckets were used as opposed to
wooden buckets.
Many families possessed a cast iron sugar kettle for boiling up the sap. One farm I
visited had a copy of a Sears catalogue from 1902, showing the different sized kettles.
These cost a considerable amount, around half a year's wages.
Maple sugar in the early 19th century used to cost half the amount of cane sugar,
gradually the prices evened out. Today maple sugar or syrup is much more expensive
than cane or beet sugar.
The Tree
You can tap most trees for syrup - walnut and poplar, for instance. Birch and maple
are of course the most well-known. Birch syrup is found in Alaska and Northern
Europe, but one needs 120 litres of birch water to make 1 litre of birch syrup. The
maple syrup forests are not planted, for red or black sugar maples grow wild in their
thousands across Canada.
You can tap a maple tree when it reaches 35 to 40 years old. A tree can take up to four taps,
depending on the girth of its trunk, though more than four is not recommended as it would
adversely affect the tree's health. As with bees and honey, one must not be too greedy.
The maple syrup farmers say there is no harm done to trees that are tapped; they've compared
tapped and untapped trees and seen no difference.
The maple tree is emblematic of Canada; the leaf is on the flag, it's even on the
money.
The Process
The combination of cold nights and warm days, the freezing and defrosting, is ideal
for maple water to form and run in the tree. Ideally the temperature is between
minus 5 and minus 15 at night and plus five and plus 15 during the day. Quebec
produces 75% of the world's maple syrup.
When the leaves have died off, you can tap the tree. In the southern part of Canada,
the season can start in February but in Quebec, further north, it starts in March. The
season can last from 3 to 16 weeks long, although generally it is around 6 weeks. The
syrup changes in quality and taste and grade from the beginning of the season to the
end. Once the trees get buds, the water becomes bitter and the season is finished.
In the old days each tree was 'tapped' by drilling a hole, screwing in a spigot and
attaching an aluminium bucket. Today tubes are linked to several trees and fed
through to a central tank. This saves time because maple syrup farms contain
thousands of trees, which would require a great deal of walking to collect individually
from each maple.
So the water is collected every day, and each tree produces around two litres a
day. The water is boiled for hours; at small farms, they still evaporate it in a bath over a
wood fire, as pictured above. Farmer André Pollander told me that when the steam is
escaping from the chimney of his sugar shack, all his neighbours come and hang out for the
sugaring off. This process goes on for days, accompanied by the smell of maple sugar and the
crackling of the wood fire. He and his neighbours particularly love the maple water when it
has approximately 40% Brix. 'It's very nice with a little whisky,' he confided.
Bigger manufacturers will use industrial means to evaporate and concentrate the
water, which doesn't use as much energy.
Rather like jam making, you need to get to a setting point, where the maple water has
thickened to the point of dripping off the ladle.
It's extremely important that the buckets, the baths and all the tools are extremely
clean so as not to taint the flavour.
Grades and flavours
Maple syrup has several grades and four or five flavours depending on the region it
comes from. The US has just brought in a new grading system with four grades but
Quebec has five. Only grade A is sold as maple syrup, while grades B and C can be
used for sweets, lollipops and in baking.
In Quebec they classify by light transmission - how transparent the syrup is. The
thinking is that the paler the syrup, the fewer impurities. Another factor is the Brix
scale (Brix is sugar percentage). Maple syrup must contain 66 to 68.9% Brix.
Extra light: 100% to 75% of light transmission
Golden: pale gold
Amber: medium
Dark: a robust taste
Very dark: a strong taste; 26.9% and under of light transmission
I do like the flavour of the darker syrups, but these are rarer. Often the really dark
syrup comes just before the tree buds. The flavour is affected by the soil; an acidic soil
gives a bite to the syrup whereas an alkali, limestone soil will result in a buttery, smooth
syrup.
There is also maple sugar, a crystallised version of the syrup and maple butter, a creamy
version of maple syrup that can be used as a spread (it's gorgeous).
When buying maple syrup however, it's best to do like Canadians do and buy it in a tin, not a
clear glass jar. Like olive oil, it is damaged by light.
Health Benefits
Maple syrup contains 54 anti-oxidants. It has riboflavin, zinc, and a newly discovered
element known as 'quebecol'. Some studies are suggesting that it is a good sugar
replacement for sufferers of Diabetes 2 as it does not spike blood sugar in the same
way white cane sugar does.
The Sugar Shack
A spring tradition in Canada is for families to drive out to the countryside to a
'cabane à sucre' and have an old style sugar shack dinner where they gorge on the
new season maple syrup.
Dishes tend to be basic, the sustenance of yesteryear, when settlers first arrived. Pea
soup, omelette, ham, oreilles de criss (Christ's ears or fried pork rinds), beans,
sausages, fried potatoes, crêpes, tarte à sucre, pork and of course the maple syrup,
served in jugs lined up and down the table and poured copiously on everything,
sweet or savoury. It is even poured into the pea soup.
At the end everyone dons mittens, hats and coats, troops outside and has maple taffy
on snow.
While maple syrup is a breakfast food in most of Canada and North America, in
Quebec the sirop d'erable is for dinner.
I went to several sugar shack meals:
One just outside a snow-bound Quebec City at the farm, L'érablière Lac
Beauport, of Richard Lessard, a guy who wore a dead red fox on his head while
showing me his chainsaw and roadkill museum. This was a huge affair of 250 guests,
with a traditional Quebec fiddler, dancing and a fantastic atmosphere if rather basic
food.
La Buche in Quebec City, which looks like a sugar shack, all red gingham and pine
interiors, is a restaurant that specialises in modern Quebecois food, with many
typical maple syrup dishes given a unique twist by brilliant young chef Donovan
Ouellet.
The second was a pop up sugar shack at a chic Montreal location, Pavillon Cartier,
where they deconstructed the sugar shack tradition with a mix of modern conceptual
cuisine and traditional foods. There were some interesting dishes.
Lastly at the cabane à sucre Du Pic Bois (woodpecker) in Brigham, the Eastern
Townships, north of Montreal. This is the farm of André Pollander. I was there
with 100 guests, many of whom wore the typical red and black Lumberjack shirts.
Families go year after year, it is one of the top ten sugar shacks in the region.
Maple Taffy on Snow Recipe
Readers may remember the story from Little House on the Prairie where they make
maple taffy on snow. This is a traditional finale to each sugar shack meal and is a
spring treat enjoyed just as much by adults as by children.
Ingredients:
Maple syrup
Clean Snow
Flat lollypop sticks
Washing up bowl
Candy thermometer
Jug
Boil maple syrup to 115ºC or 235ºF. (Although Monsieur Pollander said 111ºC.) It's
best to use a thermometer.
Pack clean snow into a shallow container so that it is compacted and flat on top.
With a jug, drip the maple syrup onto the snow in thick strips (an inch or 2-3cm wide
and 6 inches/ 12cm long).
Using a flat lollipop stick, press it down into the liquid maple syrup until it starts to
stick, then slowly roll up into a popsicle. Hold the stick sideways as you are eating it,
otherwise it'll drip down into your sleeves.