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A sugar shack (French: cabane à sucre), also known as sap house, sugar house, sugar shanty or sugar cabin is an establishment, primarily found in Eastern Canada and northern New England. Sugar shacks are small cabins or groups of cabins where sap collected from maple trees is boiled into maple syrup .
Maple taffy – also known as maple toffee, is a confection made by boiling maple sap past the point where it would form maple syrup but not so long that it becomes maple butter or maple sugar. It is sometimes prepared and eaten alongside during the making of maple syrup at a sugar house or cabane à sucre.
Sugar House, Sugarhouse, and other variants of that phrase may refer to: A sugar shack, a cabin used to boil sap from sugar maple trees into maple syrup; Sugar House, Salt Lake City, a neighborhood in Salt Lake City, Utah Sugar House Park, a park in the Sugar House neighborhood of Salt Lake City
Maple Rosemary Roast Turkey. The key to making a beautiful roast turkey for the holidays is all in the glaze. It's sweet and savory with seasonal flavors like rosemary, orange, and maple syrup.
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Bascom Maple Farms is one of the top four maple syrup processors in the United States and also buys, produces, bottles and sells pure maple syrup and maple sugar. [4] The Bascom family began producing maple syrup in 1853 and has operated commercial syrup production and maple packing facilities for over 40 years.
The celebration of maple syrup begins on Tappin' Sunday, which occurs on the second Sunday in March. This includes the tapping of all the maple trees on Chardon Square to make syrup for the festival. The sap collected is then taken to the Chardon Square sugar house where it is turned into maple syrup stirs for customers to enjoy.
Sugar bush refers to a forest stand of maple trees which is utilized for maple syrup. This was originally an Indigenous camp set up for several weeks each spring, beginning when the ice began to melt and ending when the tree buds began to open. [1] At a traditional sugarbush, all the trees were hand tapped and the sap was boiled over wood fires.