O.K., I get it.
Like this site.
Sounds good to me. They even have an on-line source in the comments.
If you boil a gallon of anything for an hour you're not going to have much left in the pot!
I was thinking instead of adding sugar or honey, I wonder if it would be worth it to boil it down until I get a high enough SG. Also, what yeast would be good for this?
I picked up 3 1/2 gallons of sap this morning. The SG is a little lower than I hoped, It's 1.014. It's on the stove right now, I'll boil it down to a gallon, but I'm going to have to add some of the maple syrup I got from him last year. I'll be shooting for something in the 1.070-1.090 range.
I'll be watching for your up-dates here, Wayne. I started tapping trees during last month's full moon, not too great of flow yet, my SG for the first galon was 1.006.
I've been boiling it down some, but don't have a clue what the SG is after being boiled.
... Hopefully we are not boiling to the syrup point? Have you added honey before boiling?
Have been reading a book by Mors Kochanski ( Bush Craft )
This is a wilderness survival book from our friends to the north
of our border, my family's origin Canada!
Well, of all things I find an ancient mead recipe dating from 1717 8)
To every Gallon of Birch-Water put a quart of honey well stilled together, then boil it almost an hour with a few cloves, and a little lemon-pel,keeping it well scum'd; when it is sufficiently boil'd and become cold, add to it three or four spoonfuls of good ale, to make it work, which it will do like new ale; and when the yeast begins to settle, bottle it up as you do other winery liquors, it will in a competent time become a most brisk and spirituous drink, which is a very powerful opener - Moses Cook (1717), The Manner of Raising, Ordering and Improving Forest-Trees.
I've found a birch I think I can tap! Will put Moses Cook on the Brewlog page if I can work it out!
Any suggestions for what
Good Ale
I might use as a starter?