By now, you're probably familiar with using maple syrup to sweeten cocktails. But what about its cousin? Here's how to use ...
Maple syrup, naturally sweet with its lush notes of vanilla and caramel, is one of the first signs of spring. Now, maple’s lesser-known forest cousin birch is having its day. Nature’s unrequited gifts ...
Aspen, beech, and birch sap seen as small niche, but could have potential for new revenue streams for maple producers.
Either way, sugarmakers foresee more adaptation ahead. The tapping of trees for sap or syrup is an age-old practice. Birch sap, like maple, has long been harvested by Indigenous people living in ...
Patties can be used for future use. A way our people preserved food to plan ahead and avoid waste.” Birch syrup is primarily produced in the Cariboo region of British Columbia. Different from ...
Maple syrup, naturally sweet with its lush notes of vanilla and caramel, is one of the first signs of spring. Now, maple’s lesser-known forest cousin birch is having its day. Nature’s ...