do canadians really do this? Anyone got a good recipe? Where do you buy snow?
I've only ever heard of it done with molasses during pioneer times, but I'm no Canadian
I think this only happens in Quebec and Nunavut
>>8983684
Usually it only happens in sugar shacks. Super fresh maple syrup gets cooked down to a softball stage before being poured over clean snow and scooped up using a stick. You could probably do it at home if you blend up some ice.
>>8983684
I think it's also called jack wax, my man
Breddy good. Had it as a kid in northern Ontario.
>>8983684
The early voyageur settlers did this.
It's absolutely delicious but obviously not somehow if Canadians eat often if at all.
Haha
>>8983793
Clean snow will give it a sweet taste. Yellow snow will be more umami
>>8983684
I've had this before it's good.
I heard it tastes like maple syrup.
haven't done this in decades, mostly just for kids
>>8983684
I had that in Wisconsin. It's fine. If you don't live somewhere where you can just wait a couple weeks for snow, i guess you can shred some ice cubes.
live in western canada, there's no sugar maples, but people tap regular maples and just have to reduce it more
see it at farmers markets, good way to get attention to sell a $25 bottle of maple syrup