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How to tap a maple tree

Close up photo of clear, watery Sugar Maple sap in a bucket with a maple tap

Within 40 steps of my house there are seven Sugar Maple trees. Big trees. Historic trees. Right now, I have four buckets hanging from three of the trees, collecting maple sap. Here’s more about how to tap a maple tree.

Why tap a maple tree?

Drink sap straight from the maple. It’s got electrolytes, antioxidants, vitamins and minerals. Fresh maple sap is a fantastic recovery drink post-workout (or a natural hangover cure).

Offer bottles of pure maple sap or cooked syrup at a farm stand at the end of your driveway.

Best tip ever: use maple sap right from the tree in place of water to brew lightly-sweet coffee or tea! Hot lemon water, lemonade or limeade would also be delicious made with maple sap instead of water.

I wouldn’t do this in my coffee maker because I can’t clean the natural sugar out of the lines, but it would be wonderful in a French press. We just boil the sap and drop in a tea bag.

Hey, if you have time and energy, you can boil the sap down to maple syrup. 100% pure, natural maple syrup.

The stuff you get at the diner is none of those things. Diner syrup is mostly corn syrup, flavoring and preservatives. I know it’s delicious on pancakes. It’s just not maple syrup. There’s no tree involved.

Where do tapable maple trees grow?

Maple trees grow from Canada to Tennessee and Missouri to Maine.

View a map of the maple-growing region by Lake Forest College.

You can tap some maple trees but not all. If you have one of these five maples, you can tap them:

  • Sugar maple (highest concentration of sugar)
  • Red maple (but not a Japanese red maple
  • Silver maple
  • Black maple
  • Box elder maple (aka Maple Ash)

When I told my neighbor I was going home to tap my Sugar Maples, she got so excited. She never tapped a tree before. They don’t grow well where she grew up.

She tilted her head and gave me a smile like she was watching a sappy movie (pun for fun). “Ohhhh, it’s so New-England,” she sighed.

That’s right. I am surrounded by Sugar Maples. It’s exactly the kind of thing I should share with you, no matter where you live.

How do I know it’s a maple tree?

Sure, it’s kind of hard when there are no maple leaves on it.

Search online or in an app specially designed to help you identify trees. There are even sites and apps that help you identify maple trees.

Mature Sugar Maple bark looks like this.

Up close photo of sugar maple bark

Twigs grow on maple branches in pairs directly across from each other. There’s a good example of this pairing along the right side of this photo.

Sugar Maple twigs and branches for identification

When can I tap them?

Early March is a good time to tap, but it is possible to tap trees in mid-February. You want “warm” days and cold nights with the day time temperature to be around 40 degrees Fahrenheit/5 degrees Celsius and cold nights that fall below freezing.

Go ahead and tap your trees in February if you just want to drink the sap straight from the tree. It tastes like lightly-sweetened water. It looks like water, too; because, well, it is mostly water.

At the beginning of sugaring season, the sugar content is lower. You won’t get enough to cook into a meaningful amount of maple syrup, and it spoils after a week.

Things to consider

  • Drink the sap straight. It’s full of electrolytes and antioxidants. Sounds like a great hangover remedy.
  • Fresh sap doesn’t store for long. Up to a week, if kept very cold, outside covered in shade, in a bucket surrounded by snow. If it turns yellow, pour it into your compost pile.
  • Never cook sap inside your house. It ruins your walls and ceilings with condensation.
  • Cook sap outside on a grill, turkey fryer, or maple syrup evaporator…or in a sugar house.

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Collecting maple sap is easy

Keep it simple and cheap by just drilling a hole and sticking a straw or rubber tube inside. Be sure to cover your collection bucket with a lid though. Bugs and bark fall inside. You will still have to strain or filter some debris out of your sap.

I bought this Maple Sugar Starter Kit, which came with everything in one box: buckets, lids, spiles (metal taps), drill bit, hooks, and cheesecloth for straining out the debris. I’ll include links below for the components, in case you don’t need a whole kit.

Close up photo of clear, watery Sugar Maple sap in a bucket with a maple tap

How to tap maple trees

Step one: identify a maple tree at least 18″ in diameter
Step two: drill a hole on the south or southeast side of the tree using a cordless drill (electric drill if your extension cord reaches) or a hand drill at a comfortable height. Waist-height works pretty well. Your drill bit should be almost as large as your spile/tap, and you should drill on a slight upward angle.
Step three: insert a metal spile/tap or plastic spout and tube that drains into a bucket, bottle or even a clean milk jug
Step four: cover the bucket with a lid or plastic wrap held on with tape or a tight rubber band so the wind doesn’t blow it off.
Step five: drink the sap straight from the tree or use it in place of water to make tea, iced tea or lemonade.

Cooking sap into maple syrup

If you get at least 10 gallons/40 liters of maple sap within a couple of days, you can cook it down to make maple syrup. Any less than that and it will only make a mug full of syrup, which seems hardly worth the all-day effort.

Collect and use or cook the fresh sap within a week if stored in a cold, shady spot, packed into snow. It spoils like milk, unfortunately.

Close up photo of clear, watery Sugar Maple sap in a bucket with a maple tap

How to cook maple sap into syrup

Filter your sap first to remove the bark, bugs and debris that land inside. You can use cheesecloth or maple syrup filters. You can purchase a kit for filtering your syrup, too.

Set up a place outside with plenty of fuel to keep your sap boiling for hours. I use the side burner on my grill, but a turkey fryer or maple syrup evaporator will do.

DO NOT cook maple sap in your house. As it boils for hours, it will make so much condensation that drips down your walls and ceilings, ruining them.

Pour your sap into a giant pot and boil away. You can add additional sap as it cooks down.

If you can, bring up the temperature of that fresh sap you are adding so it’s not freezing cold. I pre-boil pots on my stove and then add them to the big pot. You want to keep the pot boiling. Otherwise, it’s ok. It will just take longer to cook down into maple syrup. Long. Like a whole day.

Warning! Watch your pots. Check them frequently. If you burn the syrup, you ruin a whole batch. Yikes!

You want to cook it until it’s a brown-amber color, the color and taste of maple syrup. Oh yeah, I poured some 100% pure maple syrup on snow so you could see the color of a New England snowcone.

Maple syrup poured onto snow - pretend snowcone

Delicious! Pour it on pancakes, vanilla ice cream, oatmeal. Mix it into your tea, coffee or latte. Make cookies, candy or fudge.

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Best 5 items at the Lizzie’s Corner farmers market stand

October 9, 2018

All summer I tried and failed to make it over to the Seymour Farmers Market behind the historic Seymour Congregational Church about 25 minutes drive from New Haven, Connecticut. You should see it. Ok, I should take some pictures so you can see it. There’s a powerful terraced waterfall in the Naugatuck River across the street. The church itself is tall and white, a true classic New England meeting house of worship.

The farmers market is only a half mile from the 18th century preserved Seymour Antiques district. When you walk down the streets in the district, you can feel what it was like to take the same stroll 100 years ago. The buildings have hardly changed, including the little gem that houses Lizzie’s Corner, a handcrafted and specialty gifts shop.

On Tuesday afternoons, the curators at Lizzie’s select some of their finest goods and set up a display at the Seymour Farmers Market. Here are my top picks from Lizzie’s Corner.

#5
Goat Boy Goat’s Milk Soaps

Homemade goat milk soap

It’s enough to make you wish you could get a breath of these fresh scents through the phone or computer screen right now. Goatboy Soaps started 17 years ago. The handcrafted products are produced in small batches using fresh goat’s milk. There is goat’s milk soap in my shower right now. It’s so soothing.

#4 Vintage bottles re-imagined

Vintage bottles repurposed into do-it-yourself inspirational quote decor

A charming home craft turned into a business, these are Bookworm Bottles. Decorating with vintage items is a win-win. Your house looks like a designer planned it, and these old bottles get a new chance at life. The littlest ones would be so cute at a wedding. The warm brown bottles would be beautiful down the center of your table paired with candlesticks and vases of cut twigs or greens from your backyard.

#3 Elderberry apple shots

Elderberry apple shots

Oh stop, you can make gummies with these. Or cocktails. Or shoot some non-alcoholic Elderberry Apple Shots as they’re intended, as part of a healthy lifestyle. Healthy, Tiffany, not boozy. You’ve already read the ingredient list, more or less: elderberries and apple cider vinegar. Both are organic and produced by the small farm that makes the shots, Fat Stone Farm.

#2 Swedish dishcloths

Swedish washcloths

Swedish dishcloths aka eco-friendly cleaning cloths are really starting to pop up in shops, and it’s wonderful! They are all-natural, last for 6-9 months and then biodegrade. Mine will go into the compost bin someday. Google trends shows searches for “swedish dishcloth” started to increase in June 2016. I first saw them in the gift shop at a nature center in Cape Cod. My first one is still going strong after three months. You can machine wash them, but I just put mine in the dishwasher sometimes. They don’t stink like sponges. I’m going to do a whole article on these because I use and love them. In the meantime, see what all the fuss is about. You don’t need a 10-pack, just pick up a few to start.

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#1 Homebrew maple syrup

Pure New England Maple Syrup

When it’s time for comfort food and the warm smell of cool-weather baking, enter organic, local maple syrup. In New England, it’s popular to drizzle some maple syrup over sliced, baked acorn squash, another farm stand favorite. My kids and I make pancakes from our own modified recipe almost every weekend. My little daughter licks the plate clean of maple syrup if you don’t stop her. Ahh, childhood.

Have you seen the original Farmstand5 from Cape Cod?
Fancy’s Farm Stand, Orleans, MA