Notable maple sugar shacks across Canada
A visit to the sugar shack is more than buying syrup: There is the wafting smell of wood smoke when approaching the building, the sweet smell of evaporating sap upon entering, and maybe a walk through the woods. If you're hungry, many operations serve food such as pancakes, bacon, sausages, beans baked in syrup, maple-sweetened treats like sugar pie, and taffy made by pouring thick syrup on a bed of snow.
• Ride in a horse-drawn sleigh, then stop for pancakes at Sugar Moon Farm in Earltown, Nova Scotia, which also has a chef's night with multi-course gourmet meals highlighting maple syrup.
• Take part in a traditional sugar-party meal, folk songs, and sleigh rides at Village Québécois d'Antan, a pioneer village in Drummondville, Quebec.
• Visit Wheelers Maple Products in Kingston, Ontario. In addition to a pancake house, there is a maple museum with a comprehensive collection of maple syrup production equipment and tools.
Beyond sugar maples: Manitoba maples, birch and BC bigleaf maples
Maple syrup comes from the sugar maple, which grows in South Eastern Canada. Don't despair if you live in Western Canada, as the sap of some other trees can be used to make flavourful syrup:
• Savour Manitoba maple (box elder) syrup at the sugaring-off party held at the Saint-Pierre-Jolys Museum in Manitoba.
• Try birch syrup at Birch Place Farm in BC. While maple syrup requires 40 litres of sap per litre of syrup, birch syrup requires 85-150 litres of sap.
• Or taste bigleaf maple syrup from Backlund's Backwoods on Vancouver Island.
Fun maple syrup festivals
Many communities host maple-related festivals featuring trips to a sugar bush, wagon rides, maple-themed food, dancing, and lots of syrup! Well known festivals include the Elmira Maple Syrup Festival and Warkworth Maple Syrup Festival in Ontario, le festival Beauceron de l’Érable in Quebec, and the Saint-Quentin Maple Festival in New Brunswick.
Find maple syrup products
Maple Syrup can usually be found at farmers markets, roadside stands, or a local sugar bush. Other useful resources include producer associations and provincial agencies such as the Ontario Maple Syrup Producers Association, Maple Producers' Association of Nova Scotia, New Brunswick Maple Syrup Association Inc., and Bonjour Quebec.
Page 1 of 2









Comment reported
Thank you for reporting this comment as inappropriate.
Back to Comments »