Date: Fri 19-Mar-1999
Date: Fri 19-Mar-1999
Publication: Bee
Author: STEVEB
Quick Words:
McLaughlin-vineyards-maple
Full Text:
Another Good Run For The Sugar Maples
(with photos)
BY STEVE BIGHAM
The annual maple syrup season in Connecticut is drawing to a close, but David
Wuchek remained busy this week creating the sweet stuff down at McLaughlin
Vineyards on Alberts Hill Road.
As Dave points out, it takes a lot of work (and a lot of sap) to get the syrup
on the breakfast table for your morning pancakes. First, the sap is collected
from Sugar Maple trees, using spigots or taps installed into the trees. The
sap then undergoes a boiling process in a wood or oil fired evaporator. This
dissolves the water out of the sap, leaving only the sugar. After one last
boil, what you have left is pure, sweet Connecticut maple syrup. It takes 40
gallons of sap to make one gallon of syrup, Dave said. McLaughlin Vineyards
produces about 500 gallons of syrup annually.
As Ron Olsen of the Department of Agriculture points out, the time when sap
begins to run from maple trees is considered one of nature's most unique
outdoor events.
The sugaring season usually begins around February 1 and continues through
mid-March. According to Mr Olsen, the ideal conditions are sunny, above
freezing temperatures during the day and below freezing temperatures at night.
During this period, the trees undergo a physiological change, inducing the sap
to run freely.
There are over 100 sugar houses in Connecticut, including McLaughlin
Vineyard's newly constructed building -- complete with the maple leaf carving
adorning the roof.