Date: Fri 08-Mar-1996
Date: Fri 08-Mar-1996
Publication: Bee
Author: SHANNO
Illustration: C
Location: A-11
Quick Words:
McLaughlin-maple-syrup-winery
Full Text:
(feature on Morgen McLaughlin, maple sugaring & syruping, 3/8/96)
Syrup Is The Product, Not The Process-
Maple Sugaring In McLaughlin Country
(with photos, dropquote)
B Y S HANNON H ICKS
aple syrup production was not part of the package deal when Morgen McLaughlin
decided to take over managing her family's wine business in 1994. It is today.
When the enterprising then-21 year old took over the vines at McLaughlin
Vineyards in Sandy Hook, her first concern was learning the wine business. In
fact, when she took a job in the vineyard's office after graduating Boston
College with a business degree that May, she hadn't even planned on taking
over the business; for a few months, she told everyone she would stick around
to help out. Meanwhile, she was determined to continue her education and work
elsewhere.
But by September, Morgen realized she was not going back to school. After a
summer of learning the ins and outs of the wine business - "it was a real
trial by fire," says today's fast-thinking businesswoman - her natural
instincts took over. By Christmas, the business was being run by Morgen, who
was also living alone in the house she had grown up in with her parents and
younger brother, Justin. Her parents have moved to Colorado, and Justin is a
student at the University of Connecticut; continuing the wine business on
Albert's Hill Road is wholly up to Morgen.
The vineyard has now celebrated two successful years under Morgen's helm. In
fact, with 1995 being called one of the greatest harvest years in the last two
decades for Eastern vineyards (the long, hot summer allowed for very ripe
fruit, with little incidence of rot and disease), Morgen watched as the first
vineyard wine of 1995, a Nouveau, sold out in under a week.
Working During A "Down" Time
Last week, Morgen McLaughlin began maple sugaring at her family's vineyard for
the second season straight. Sugaring is the process of getting sugar from
maple trees. Boiling down the sugar to make maple syrup is "syruping,"
although scores of people confuse the terms, referring to the sugaring process
as syruping.
"What you're doing is boiling the sap - the sugar of the tree - into syrup,"
Morgen said last week while taking a quick break for lunch - cheese and
crackers.
The vineyard manager was about to make a roadtrip to Springfield, Mass., to
personally pick up the evaporator that will make the vineyard's syruping
process move much easier and become more time-efficient this year. Delivery on
the machine to Sandy Hook was delayed through the manufacturer, so Morgen
wanted to make sure it would arrive as soon as possible once it was ready.
This take-charge kind of thinking is what keeps this young lady so well
grounded; she has good ideas, and follows them through to completion herself.
The evaporator is a special boiler that will produce maple syrup after a
week's worth of boiling. Traditional boiling down - what Morgen and crew had
to do last year, using a huge pot over an outdoor barbecue pit - took up to
three weeks.
To make syrup, you must first tap into sugar maples. These trees offer the
sweetest sugar, which results in the sweetest syrup possible. Red maples can
be tapped, but the sugar content is not as high; Morgen learned that lesson
last year, her first at making syrup on her own. After sugar maples, black
maples are the next most commonly used to make syrup.
Maple sap itself is a colorless liquid with a light, sweet taste. It runs as
loose as water, and is just as clean. The maple taste and amber color of syrup
are formed during the boiling process. Sugar turns darker as the sugaring
season continues, with the peak sugar flowing during the middle of the season.
From this, the medium-ambered syrup is produced.
"You want to look for a medium-to-light brown color," says Morgen. "You don't
want anything really light, nor really dark.
The McLaughlins have 75 trees to tap on their property. Trees, as a general
rule, can produce as much as a gallon of sap for each tap it has per day.
Trees should be 30-40 years old before tapping, and more than ten inches in
diameter.
Taps need to be spaced at least six inches away from the taps of the previous
year, Morgen pointed out. Trees are tapped only once a year, in late winter.
In southern Connecticut, plants begin awakening in mid-to-late February, when
the daytime temperature averages into the 40s, then night temperatures return
to below freezing.
"This is what gets the sugar running," Morgen said. "Plants are now coming out
of their dormant season."
In Vermont, where things are a little bit colder but maple sugaring is a huge
business, things will generally start about two weeks later than southern New
England.
"Because of this [colder than usual] winter, it's been just this week [that
we've started tapping]," Morgen said last week. The vineyard is not producing
wine these days, but its general manager is still kept busy daily.
Between planning this year's wines, opening the wine house for wine tastings
on weekends (plus maple syruping demonstrations each weekend in March),
planning the summer jazz series the vineyard embarked upon last summer, and
continuing to prune what is left over from last year, Morgen's days are far
from idle. She is also busy getting wine ready to sell, bottling and designing
new labels for this year's vintage.
"We should have been able to have syrup this weekend, but because it's been so
cold...," she said Friday afternoon, with a barely perceptible shrug.
The sap may not have been running steadily last week, but Morgen was ready to
go. By this week, she was still eager about getting the syrup underway, and
was almost getting impatient running into what seemed like one problem after
another. Morgen's got a great head on her shoulders, though, and after working
in the wine business - not to mention after growing up surrounded by the
fields of vines her family has toiled over for decades - she is one who
understands there is no rushing Mother Nature. But that doesn't make
complications any easier to swallow.
After picking up her evaporator over the weekend, Morgen then needed to obtain
insulating bricks. These would, when placed around the area where the wood
will be burning beneath the evaporator, make the evaporator more heat
efficient. Unfortunately, early this week, Morgen was having a tough time
locating the bricks.
"We're still set to go," she voiced Tuesday afternoon. By this Saturday, the
sap will be boiling and syrup will be ready. (The vineyard has a special
spring weekend planned, by the way, March 23-24. It will celebrate the peak of
sugaring season with a breakfast at the Sandy Hook Firehouse, and Morgen will
have tastings available of this year's newest wines.)
This year, the vineyard also has a bottler, which finishes and filters the
syrup so it can be sold with a Grade A classification. "Good" maple syrup is
based on sugar content (called "brix," the same term used to describe sugar
content in grapes when making wine), its color, clarity and, of course, taste.
Since she began making maple syrup - her do-it-right attitude included
intensive classes at the University of Connecticut - Morgen has been
constantly amazed more wineries do not become involved in sugaring and
syruping in their off-seasons. The two techniques, she emotes, are very
similar. In fact, she recently wrote a paper for a trade magazine encouraging
other wineries to follow her lead.
"The production of both wine and syrup is remarkably similar," she says.
"They're both manufactured; they're both breaking down sugars. In wine, sugar
becomes alcohol - that's what alcohol is, it's sugar. Sugar in wine becomes
alcohol through fermentation."
Like the labels on each bottle of McLaughlin Vineyards wine being sold these
days, Morgen has designed the labels for the jugs of syrup to be sold this
year, too. The jugs will boast a scene she drew depicting the vineyard. The
8-ounce jugs, filled with pure Grade A maple syrup, will be offered for $6
each.
Sugar is so watered down when it comes from the tree, syrup makers need to
boil forty gallons of a tree's clear sugar in order to generate one gallon of
pure maple syrup.
The vineyard hopes to produce 25 gallons of syrup, which may not seem like a
lot until you remember the 40-1 ratio of gallons of sugar to gallons of
finished syrup. Which means Morgen is going to need to collect and boil down
at least 1,000 gallons of pure sugar.
"Consumers, at first, don't realize why syrup is so expensive," she said.
"[Not when] they can go to the store and buy [a bottle of syrup] for $1.99,
but that's because there's no real syrup in there. It's corn syrup!
"With maple syrup" - she was gathering steam here, like the boiler that will
be going at full speed for the next six weeks at the winery's overhang - "the
big expense is that 40-to-1 [sugar-syrup] ratio. Plus you've got your
manpower, you've got either propane or wood to boil... No one makes money
doing this.
"What's amazing is that people in Vermont - there are even a few families in
Connecticut - this is their sole source of income, six weeks of work. And then
it's just selling syrup [the rest of the year]."
The sap will continue running for about six weeks, which takes Morgen into
late April. Until then, she can also continue to work on a vineyard section
where chardonnay will ultimately be planted.
Pruning needs to be done to cut away growth from last year, as well as any
winter kill. The winery's growing season begins with "bud break" - when the
buds on the vines swell, then burst - usually around the first week of May.
Spraying starts then, as does tilling the soil... it will then be time to go
back to the wine business full-time.
"It's nice to have this to work on, because now is something of a down time
for the winery," says Morgen.
Until mid-April, McLaughlin Vineyards will be making and selling maple syrup.
The vineyard will be open weekends for demonstrations at the sugaring sites,
free of charge. The regular wine tasting sessions will also be held each
weekend, from 12-5 pm Saturday and Sunday. Groups are welcome to schedule
appointments to visit the vineyard during the week; Morgen has already had
telephone calls from Brownie and Girl Scout troops. For additional
information, telephone McLaughlin Vineyards at 426-1533.
