Yup, I started with a turkey fryer and and a 20lb propane tankYou never know what you might learn on Rokslide--if you have access to a few sugar maples, the cost on entry is low--you need taps, buckets or bags for the sap and a way to boil it down outside. You can do it simple and small scale (hotel pan on a wood fire/propane burner) or as big, complex or expensive as the Roth Sugarbush catalog/website's outer limits (vacuum-assisted tubing, reverse osmosis, etc.). I recommend it as a great late winter/early spring project. I'm in New York these days but I know it can be done further south at least to Virginia, maybe further.
Definatly - I went to wood after using propane burners. I had to feed the fire every eight minutes. The time and work it took wasn't worth it. I now use natural gas and if I want that smoke flavor I just throw some in the smoker.I used to. But moved out west a number of years ago. It's 1000 times better boiling over a wood fire and getting a bit o.that smoke In there.
As well as the great maple syrup heist in 2011You want to read something interesting and amazing, Google Canada's reserve of maple syrup. Last I read it was around 100,000 barrels.
Yeah thats barrels