Very interesting topic and a great variety of posts.
Thank You All for giving us the benefit of your experiences.
X
-
I'll take a stab, Hershell. I'll lay money on one of those fine older gentlemen being the elusive Wills. Though he has spammed the internets and my email in box with photos of practically all of his body parts, I have yet to see a head shot. Why he's afraid of showing his mug when all else has been revealed is a mystery to me.
-
Hey Willis I was wondering is that a Desoto grill? You used for your avatar?
Leave a comment:
-
Thanks Bob. I wish I could smell the maple syrup. It has got to smell great. I like the smell of cane syrup but maple has to be great.
Leave a comment:
-
I've lived in California all of my relatively short life, and reading about a process I never would have done here is great. I've enjoyed hearing about the process of syrup making, and the photos. It brings a little nostalgia like the Laura Ingalls Wilder's Little House series, where the author gives an account of her life in the Big Woods in the 1800's (fictionalized a little for kids), and lovingly described the process of making maple syrup and maple candy.
Leave a comment:
-
My dad used to tell us stories of kids standing outside the boiling shed waiting for someone to come out and pour some maple syrup on the snow for them (he was from Michigan)...
One of the many things we miss out on here in California
Thanks for the pictures Hershell
Leave a comment:
-
We have big festivals at our Buddhist temple and the sugar cane vendors bring a little extractor to sell the fresh sugar cane juice for $5 a cup... I always look forward to that. By the end of the day they have a huge pile of the dry canes and we run around trying to find one who hasn't sold out.
Leave a comment:
-
Again your generosity for free phone calls.... I hate to see what Amish people do if you put Iphone out there for them to FaceTime!😳📸
Leave a comment:
-
When I was younger 30's that would be I was in my 30's not the 1930's lol we lived in the middle of a large Amish community, they outnumbered us "English" as they called us 3/1. One day my closest neighbor who was Amish and lived about a 1/4 mile away asked me if I would like to help for the day making syrup just to see how it is done and jumped at the chance. It is a LOT of work. Wish I had taken pictures but the Amish where we were are very conservative even by Amish standards and they would not have liked the picture taking so did not. I have a funny story along that line that I will share belowAnyway it was a LONG tiring morning of collecting sap and when you figure you have to boil 40 gallons of sap to get 1 gallon of syrup it is a lot of buckets. He would produce about 1000-1400 gallons of syrup a year most grade A some B and C grade toward the end of the season. They of course are old school......no tubing to centralized collection tanks as they modern syrup makers do now this is all 1 gallon galvanized steel buckets hanging on the trees. Horse drawn sleighs with a collection tank on the back.damn near killed me. Afternoon was boiling the sap a MUCH more enjoyable process.
Picture story......There was always some tension between the "English" landowners and the Amish when it came to property rights. The Amish with all their positive traits one not so positive was they had no respect for posted land signs which annoyed some of the "English" landowners. I did not have my land posted so they could deer hunt on my land so I did not care. One day in the tiny town we lived by myself and a friend were having breakfast and there was a group of farmers in there having a meeting trying to see what they could do about the issue. We were asked to join them and we did as saying no would have been rude. So while we were talking I said well they hate their pictures taken, they thought it "stole their souls" and I jokingly said if they are on your land take their picture. More so it would be a good money making endeavor as you could then sell their souls back to them one picture at a time.
We were on very good terms with them, heck I had a phone installed on my front porch so they could use the phone if they wanted to, there was a box there so if it was a long distance call they would leave the money to pay for the call, local was free of course. For those that don't know the conservative Amish could not have a phone. Some of the more liberal Amish sects can have a phone but only in the barns. It was mostly just the extended family of our closest neighbors that used it but given the fact most of the Amish had 10+ children it was a LARGE extended family. They are very honest people but they had dirty boots and the tracks of them coming in the house to use the phone drove my wife nuts....
A couple of weeks went by and there was a knock at the front door and there stood 3 very old Amish men dressed in their church clothes, only one of the men I recognized. They introduced themselves as the deacons of the community. I figured they wanted to use the phone they said no they had something they wanted to talk to me about. They had heard of my plan to take the Amish peoples pictures and sell the photos back to them and they were gravely concerned. I busted out laughing an action judging by the stern expressions I received they did not appreciate. I explained to them I was not serious and that it was just a joke. They were not terribly amused and apparently saw no humor in it at ALL, but the Amish are not big on humor when it came to religious things. Trying to explain a sarcastic wit to group of 80+ year old very serious Amish deacons is not an easy task and I am not sure I ever convinced them I was just kidding. I never did find out who told them I had said it.
- Likes 1
Leave a comment:
-
Thanks for sharing the photos! Brought back memories of riding the back of the tractor behind my Dad to collect the buckets of maple syrup. Boiling the syrup was a long, overnight process with many checks on the temps. All of this cooking over a wood fire inside the syrup house. Dad also grew sorghum and made sorghum syrup. He sold a few gallons of syrup to a local grocery for some extra money. Now, I think the sorghum probably tastes best! My parents also made apple cider in the fall and hominy. I wasn't allowed anywhere close to the hominy operation due to the lye. They had a large copper lined kettle to make apple butter. Lot's of work but everyone seemed to enjoy doing this out in the cold temps!
Leave a comment:
-
Look very nice Funny Man... There is place in Quebec that make fresh syrup in winter. I think is ice hotel resort. But they build table out of snow and then pour little semi warm syrup (still liquid) onto snow and they roll it onto sucker stick and make syrup pop sickle
Leave a comment:
-
Your cane looks tasty
I bought 3 different varieties from Alabama to try in my garden 3 years ago.I cut the canes in the Fall and covered the roots with mulch. One variety survived.This cane ended up growing to 1-1.25" diameter and 5-6' tall by Fall 2015.
I grew a little patch of Sugar Drip sorghum cane in 2014.
The sorghum would probably do OK in my area if I had a cheap source of water without having to worry about running my well dry.
You may only view thumbnails in this gallery. This gallery has 2 photos.2 Photos
Leave a comment:
-
This is regular sugar cane. We grow a little Cane ourself and there is a 10 acre cane maize about 5 miles away so we can't even grow cane as cheap as we can buy it. The only drawback is it is a small cane and takes a lot of stalks. We grow a red cane that can be over 1 1/2 inch in diameter so it takes fewer stalks.Last edited by Hershell; 12-20-2015, 04:33 PM.
Leave a comment:
-
I use to make maple syrup with my Dad. It was time consuming but fun. I'd love to get back into it but it probably won't happen this year. Maybe next winter... then again, I've been saying maybe next winter for the past 5 years.
- Likes 1
Leave a comment:
-
Looks like a fun time, thanks for sharing with us.
Is this sorghum cane or regular sugar cane syrup? I bought my first jar of sorghum syrup a couple years ago, that stuff is delicious on hot buttered corn bread or leftover polenta sauteed in some butter. Reminds me that I'm out and need to buy some more. Anyone know of a brand of organic sorghum syrup that they really like? There is only one variety sold in a few stores for us Northerners so I'm going to have to look on-line.
Leave a comment:
-
Back when, there was only one cane press in the county and people would bring their cane on trailers to be squeezed and made into syrup. There was a gravity line running from the press directly to the cook-down shed that had a fire pit underneath. One fire tender and four scrapers pushed and pulled it through a series of baffles coming in and it funneled off the end into jars where one person capped and stacked. When a run was finished, the cane owner got half the jars and the press owner half. It was sold in the mom & pop stores. The squeezed cane was fed to the press owners cattle. I was a young teen at the time and this was income to strip the cane in the press owner's fields, cut it, stack on trailer and unload to the press feeder. Quite the operation.
Leave a comment: