On Canada, Maple Syrup and Cabane à Sucre

It’s exactly one year since Canada became home. When we moved in January of 2020, we had no idea what the year would hold save for new schools, work, seasons and more. Twelve months later, I look back with amazement, wonder, and yes uncertainty.

On the 23rd of January, 2012, I wrote about my 2nd daughter’s love for maple syrup and shared an excellent recipe – if I say so myself for Pumpkin Maple Oat Rolls – little did I know that 8 years to the day, we would be enjoying some ourselves. And a preview – that love for maple syrup is unwavering and has persisted from that time to date.

Shortly after, in the same year – 2012 – , I expanded that piece for a magazine and shared a strong desire to explore the process of making maple syrup by visiting a Cabane à Sucre.

sugar shack (French: cabane à sucre), also known as sap housesugar housesugar shanty or sugar cabin is a semi-commercial establishment, primarily found in Eastern Canada and northern New England. Like the name implies, sugar shacks are small cabins or groups of cabins where sap collected from sugar maple trees is boiled into maple syrup. It is often found on the same territory as the sugar bush, which is intended for cultivation and production of maple syrup by way of craftsmanship (as opposed to global mass production factories built for that purpose in the 20th century). Source – Wikipedia

Sugar_houseSource: Wikipedia

Here’s an excerpt:

“As we sit at the table one fine morning, me packing my work bags and the children eating pancakes – drenched in maple syrup and garnished with chopped apples and strawberries (and yes, you can find strawberries in Nigeria in the cold early months of the year), I wonder what it would be like to have maple syrup and pancakes back in Canada. I imagine sitting in a Cabane à Sucre, the classic sugar shack, dotting the maple belts close to Montreal and Quebec. These shacks are to Canadians what pannenkoekenhuizen (pancake houses) are to the Dutch, and so on. 

One particular shack is on my list – The Cabane à Sucre Au Pied de Cochon – The Foot of the Pig Sugar Shack – a tribute to a certain Québécois’s love of all things pork and maple. This café is the only one of two hundred in the province run by a four-star chef, Martin Picard, who is lauded for reinventing recipes based on Quebec’s beloved, humble maple syrup, le sirop d’érable

His maple syrup camp comes with three rooms and 4,000 taps. Guests wander through the open kitchen, the wood-fired “evaporator” room where maple syrup is made, and the wood- paneled dining room where Picard might be seen, bedecked in a lumberjack shirt, autographing his cookbooks. All the while waiters wander about setting jugs of the still-warm syrup on diners’ tables. 

Picard’s Cabane à Sucre opened in the spring of 2009 in the St-Benoît de Mirabel countryside, 45 minutes from downtown Montreal. Its opening was set to coincide with the ‘running’ of the sap, which starts in early spring when the ground is still heavy with snow and the sun warms the trees and sap. 

And so, I’ve decided that we must plan a spring trip to Canada. Especially with the current state of things – for when I announce the dawn of a new day to a certain someone, my whispers of “Maple, Maple” yield smiles and magically…no tears! Well done maple syrup, Canadian treasure but very much at home in Nigeria.”

And so, we began the 2020 plan, to visit the Cabane à Sucre Au Pied de Cochon – The Foot of the Pig Sugar Shack when the season began, anywhere from late February to mid April and then COVID happened and so that didn’t happen.

And while much didn’t go according to plan, here are a few things to share:

Origins

We have the Indigenous peoples in Canada – First Nations, Inuit and Métis to thank for gifting us the knowledge of all things maple from sugar to syrup.

DSC_1294

Production

  • It takes about 40 litres of maple sap to yield one litre of maple syrup! Can you imagine the associated heat required?
  • According to mtl.org which celebrates Montreal, Canada produces about 80 per cent of the world’s pure maple syrup, and Québec alone makes up over 90 % of the country’s production

Characteristics

Maple syrup is classified by colour, which does impact flavour. The colour change happens as the season progresses from light in the spring to darker through the months.

According to the Government of Canada, there are 4 classes:

  • “Golden, Delicate Taste” / “Doré, goût délicat”
  • “Amber, Rich Taste” / “Ambré, goût riche”
  • “Dark, Robust Taste” / “Foncé, goût robuste”
  • “Very Dark, Strong Taste” / “Très foncé, goût prononcé

The US has its own classification system with some similar grades to the Canadian:

Grade_A_Amber_light_.pngGrade A Light Amber (US Classification)
No.1 Extra light (Canadian Classification)

Light transmission is more than 75% with a subtle taste and the color is slightly golden with a very mild and delicate maple flavour
Grade_A_Medium_Amber.pngGrade A Medium Amber (US Classification)
No.1 light (Canadian Classification)

Light transmission is between 60.5% and 74% with a subtle taste and the color is golden with a mild and sweet maple flavour
Grade_A_Dark_Amber.pngGrade A Dark Amber (US Classification )
No.1 Medium (Canadian Classification)

Light transmission is between 44% and 60.4% with a typical maple taste and the color is amber with a mild and sweet maple flavour. This is the typical maple syrup used on pancakes, cooking, etc
Grade_B.pngGrade B (US Classification )
No.2 Amber (Canadian Classification)

Light transmission is between 27% and 43.9% with a strong and pronounced maple taste.  The color is dark. This maple syrup taste is too bold to use as normal table maple syrup but can be used for cooking and baking
Grade_C.pngGrade C (US Classification
No.3 Dark (Canadian Classification)

Light transmission is less than 26.9% with a full-flavored, slightly caramelized maple syrup taste. It is only used as commercial ingredients and the color is very dark
Source: Maple Syrup World
nadine-primeau-JbIw48XKLCE-unsplash
Source, Nadine Primeau on Unsplash

So there, my welcome to Canada didn’t quite happen the way I wanted to gift myself, it’s been interesting learning things, especially things we love.

Two of my biggest realisations:

  • Land acknowledgement is only part way to recognising food sovereignty

“We would like to begin by acknowledging the land on which we gather, and which the Region of Peel operates, is part of the Treaty Lands and Territory of the Mississaugas of the Credit. For thousands of years, Indigenous peoples inhabited and cared for this land. In particular we acknowledge the territory of the Anishinabek, Huron-Wendat, Haudenosaunee and Ojibway/Chippewa peoples; the land that is home to the Metis; and most recently, the territory of the Mississaugas of the Credit First Nation who are direct descendants of the Mississaugas of the Credit.

We are grateful to have the opportunity to work on this land, and by doing so, give our respect to its first inhabitants.” Source: Region of Peel

  • Maple syrup isn’t as common as I thought – I expected every diner, restaurant to have it on the menu, and for it to be much cheaper than I would buy outside Canada

I’ve shared a lot more in my newsletter, Food is… so check it out.

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4 Comments

  1. This is so rich. Thank you for sharing. First of all, I had no idea Cabane à Sucre existed – they sound so enticing! Maple syrup is one of the indispensable ingredients in my cooking, yet I’ve taken it for granted all this time. From now on, I’m going to be thanking the indigenous people of Canada every time I use it. I love your blog and wish I had more time to expand my heart and mind with every post. Finally, I hope you’ll get to do your trip to Cabane à Sucre Au Pied de Cochon soon!

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