Alan Shepard’s menu
Maple candy — the preserved sweet from sugar bushes

New Hampshire maple sugar

PreservingReconstruction🍯moyen30 min

Maple syrup cooked and worked until it crystallizes into small melting candies: the traditional way to keep the woody taste of spring in the sugar bushes all year round.

Maple candy — the preserved sweet from sugar bushes

Maple syrup cooked and worked until it crystallizes into small melting candies: the traditional way to keep the woody taste of spring in the sugar bushes all year round.

In spring, when the sap rose, we'd tap the maples and boil, boil, boil until it became that blond sugar that melts on your tongue. My grandmother would pour it into little leaf-shaped molds, and it would last us for months — the sweetness of New Hampshire stored away. When I was a kid, it was our reward after hauling wood. A square of that sugar, and you'd last until dinner.
Alan Shepard
Ingredients
  • Reduced maple sap (syrup)according to harvest (sweet raw material)
How it was made : Native peoples of northeastern America already harvested maple sap, a skill adopted by New England settlers. Reducing syrup into solid sugar allowed the spring harvest to be preserved well beyond the short sugaring season, without refrigeration.
Sources : Nearing, Helen & Scott, 'The Maple Sugar Book', 1950 · University of New Hampshire Cooperative Extension — maple sugaring traditions