Maple butter is the most delicious secret of a northern spring. Creamy, spreadable and sugar-pie-honey-bunch sweet — and 100% all-natural. Maple butter is also called maple cream. Contrary to either ...
Could New England’s mud season be the sweetest season of all? If we’re talking maple syrup – that super sweet sap we take from trees and boil down to magic – it is. Discovering the maple syrup process ...
Maple sugaring — or syrup — season is approaching, and soon enough you'll notice buckets clinging to maple trees as hobbyists and commercial operators begin collecting the sweet sap to make maple ...
Don’t be a sap. Tap your maple trees and get that syrup. Spring is right around the corner, so that sweet sorghum is ready to flow. What’s better on pancakes than maple syrup, especially when it comes ...
HAMPDEN — Thanks to some unseasonably mild temperatures, the maple sugar season came early this year for Ferrindino Maple. “This year we started tapping on January 27,” owner Jerry Ferrindino said.
Spring can be an exciting time to start getting outside after a long, cold winter in North Dakota. And what better reason than if there is sweet maple syrup as an end result? While we don’t have lush ...
MIDDLEFIELD, Ohio — Maple syrup is a topping that is loved on pancakes, waffles, french toast and specialty dishes. Northeast Ohio is known to have many maple trees that produce local maple syrup.
The maple sap is flowing, which is a sure sign that spring is just around the corner. Learn how maple syrup is made, and maybe even try your hand at tapping a tree, at one of these events around the ...
COLUMBUS, Ohio — The transition from winter to spring is typically the season that you will notice taps on maple trees due to the prime weather conditions. Cold nights, below freezing, with mild days, ...
GRAND RAPIDS, Mich — It’s as much a Michigan tradition as playing euchre or using your hand as a map. We make maple syrup here, and this time of the year is typically the sweet spot for making the ...
On a cold, February day in the hills of the Finger Lakes, thousands of leafless maple trees stood dormant, waiting patiently for the kiss of spring. Armed with a hammer and drill, Aaron Wightman ...