Alden points out that Steve knew about short cuts like this “because he’s a map-maker..” , a fact we mentioned while following him there. [He’s a geographer, which was apparently news to Alden, who couldn’t stop remarking on how cool it was, and how surprised he was to discover this. I don’t think Steve has really been keeping his work secret, so, I can’t help but wonder, where’s Alden been?]
We wandered around the farm, checking out the equipment, the animals, and of course the sap boiling.
Last year, it was a different story, since the weather was bad and the sap really had not started running when Maine Maple Sunday happened. This year, things were in full swing, and it promises to be a good sugaring year. Cold nights, warm days.
[this is a view of the ceiling, with the steam from the sap boiling rising up to the top of the room]
Free ice cream with warm maple syrup on it. Alden sweet talked the ladies running the ice cream area and managed to get seconds.
After exploring the farm and syrup operation, we went to the pancake breakfast, held in the old East Dixfield schoolhouse, which is part of the farm. I was all snobby and thinking I wouldn’t eat anything much, since it was pancake mix, not homemade. But, then I got in there, got a plate to share with Ray, and started eating, and boy was it delicious (totally simple: pancakes, warm fresh maple syrup, and good sausages). Milo sat with Emma, who fed him about three pancakes (we are talking HUGE pancakes, not the tiny little things I make…). Apparently I am not feeding him enough at home.
3 comments:
I hope you still remember how I tapped the trees running along Upper Elm Street and steamed up the kitchen bigtime making syrup.
Anne
ah, yeah, big time...
and, the occasional part where you boiled the sap just a little too long, and it burned.
so, yesterday, or the day before, I tried to make caramel corn. Burnt it. Accckkk.
"I hope you still remember how I tapped the trees running along Upper Elm Street..."
Um, did you get elm syrup?
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