The lower the sugar percentage, the more sap you need.How long does it take to cook out sap. How much timeper gallon? For 20 gallons of sap to get 1/2 gallon ofsyrup, the whole process can take 2 days, about 12 to14 hours, outside over a wood fire.
Boil concentrated sap in kitchen until itreaches a temperature of 7 degrees over the boiling point ofwater (varies with elevation). Pour into sterilized canning jars,leaving appropriate head space, and cover with sterilized lids andrings. Process in boiling water bath for 10minutes.
Identifying Sugar Maple Trees by their Leaves.Look closely at the color of the leaves. Sugar mapleleaves will have a dark green color on the outside, and a lightergreen on the underside. In the fall, sugar maple leaves willlose their green color and take on a beautiful orange, yellow, orred.
Maple syrup can be made from any speciesof maple tree. Trees that can be tappedinclude: sugar, black, red and silver maple and box eldertrees. Of all the maples, the highest concentration of sugaris found in the sap of the sugar maple.
Red maple trees vary in size depending on thelocation and the cultivar. They grow 40 to 70 feettall with a spread of 30 to 50 feet. Red maples tendto be shorter in the southernmost part of their growingrange, which is USDA plant hardiness zones 3 through9.
Does tapping hurt the tree? Tapping atree does create a wound, but it is a wound from which thetree can readily recover and does not endanger thehealth of the tree. Commercial syrup producers are able totap trees for decades without adversely affecting the healthof the tree.
Tapping Nut Trees for Syrup (JuglansSpecies)
Though the season is longer, they actuallyproduce far less sap, only about 1/3 as much per tree asmaples. That means that you'll need to tap moretrees to get the same amount of finishedsyrup.Over most of its range, red maple is adaptable toa very wide range of site conditions, perhaps more so than anyother tree in eastern North America. It can be foundgrowing in swamps, on poor dry soils, and almost anywhere inbetween. It grows well from sea level to about 900 m (3,000ft).
Red maples (A. rubrum) may grow fast whenyoung, but many cultivars are only medium growers. Onecultivar, A. rubrum “Columnare,” is tall and narrow,growing to 50 feet by 10 feet grows at an averagerate of three feet per year.
The best bigleaf maple trees to tap arethose with a wide-open crown and a trunk diameter between 4 and 18inches. The bark of older bigleaf maple trees is grayish-brown and shallowly grooved, which makes tapping moredifficult.
Although sugar maples are the tree of choice forcommercial sugaring due to their high ratio of sugar to water intheir sap, many other types of trees can be tapped tomake syrup, including silver and red maples, hickory, birch,box elder, and walnuts.
The maple season may last 4 to 6 weeks, but sapflow is heaviest for 10 to 20 days. For us this is the month ofMarch with sometimes a few days in late February or early April aswell.
The sugar maple grows to a height of between 60and 75 feet. Therefore, it requires between 30 and 40 years toreach maturity.
The first time you can tap a maple tree is whenit is 8 inches in diameter. A 12 inch tree can take twotaps and a 16 inch tree can handle 3 taps.You should not use more than three taps on anytree. Depending on where the tree is growing itcan take 25-50 years to grow to 8 inches.