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Help Wanted

09/30/2021 | Posted by jake | | 2 Comments

EDIT : Jobs Filled, Thank you!

Nova Maple Syrup is looking for one or two individuals to join our team! We’re entering our busy seasons and need help making/packing/shipping our delicious products in the sugar shack for the Christmas rush and then working in the woods harvesting sap to make maple syrup in the winter/spring. We have a tight knit group that is passionate about what we do and need additional hands to satisfy our increasing demand.

Requirements – High school diploma, college degree/experience a plus. Work experience in the food/manufacturing industry or farming is beneficial but not necessary. Ability to understand and think of the large picture and solve problems. Many skills will be taught so being a fast learner helps if your background differs. Must be able to lift 40 pounds. Outdoor workers must be able to spend full days in the woods in both cold/warm weather. Must show up on schedule and on time and be willing to work hard. Must be fully vaccinated or have the process started.

Type – Full-time/part-time and seasonal/permanent work available. We typically work standard weekday hours but flexible scheduling is possible. Desired start date of mid October. Located minutes outside of Hartstown, PA, with additional woods in Greenville, Harmonsburg, and Conneautville.

Compensation – Competitive wages, dependent on resume, experience, and full/part-time.

Send resume and questions to sales@novamaple.com by October 12

Native American Day

09/24/2021 | Posted by Hailee Leveto |

Today is Native American Day, which is a holiday observed by a handful of states to honor the cultural contributions of Native Americans. Although Pennsylvania isn’t one of those states, we’d like to acknowledge the holiday because Native Americans have given this region a special gift – that of maple syrup!

 

Indigenous North Americans were the first people to discover that sugar existed in the sap of trees, and that sugar maple sap was the sweetest. This discovery was important to them because sap flows in the winter when other food sources are scarce.

 

Natives traditionally used the lunar calendar to decide when to harvest sap. They used an axe to gash the trees, and wooden spiles were inserted to allow the sap to drip into a vessel made from birch bark. The collected sap would then be placed in a hollowed-out tree trunk and left to freeze overnight. In the morning, the frozen water at the top would be scooped off, leaving the remaining sap below with a higher sugar content. (The more advanced version of this step in the process that we perform today is called reverse osmosis). Next, sticks or deer antlers were used to move hot rocks from a fire directly into the sap, heating it slowly and causing the water to evaporate as steam.

 

The Native Americans mostly made maple sugar either in granulated or hardened block form because it was easier to store than liquid syrup.

 

Early European settlers learned about this food source from Indigenous peoples and used their technology to make the process more efficient. They hung large iron kettles containing sap directly over a fire instead of using heated rocks. They also switched to using metal buckets made of steel and tin (and later aluminum) to collect the sap, as they were easier to keep clean and not as heavy to transport. Rolled tin became more available in the 1860s, which lead to the advent of a flat-bottomed boiling pan, the precursor to today’s evaporator. Tin cans also made it much easier to store maple syrup in liquid form.

 

Now that we know more about the history of maple syrup and how it was first made, we appreciate its sweetness even more.