Classroom lesson · Maple syrup · 🇨🇦 Canada

Maple syrup

Canada makes about 70% of the world's supply - one drop at a time

A glass bottle of amber maple syrup on a wooden table

Photo · Wikimedia Commons

What is it?

Maple syrup is a sweet, sticky, golden-brown liquid made by boiling down the sap of maple trees. About 70% of all the maple syrup in the world is made in Canada, and most of that comes from one province: Quebec. The maple leaf on Canada's flag is from the very same tree.

Tell me more

In early spring, when the days are warm but the nights are still freezing, sap starts to move up the trunks of maple trees. Farmers drill a small hole in the bark and put in a tap (like a tiny tube). The sap drips out slowly, drop by drop, into a bucket.

Sap on its own is almost as clear and runny as water - and only very faintly sweet. To turn it into maple syrup, you have to boil it for a long time so the water steams away and the sugar gets stronger and stronger. It takes about 40 litres of sap to make just 1 litre of syrup.

A single maple tree only gives a small amount of sap each year - about enough for one bottle. The trees aren't harmed by tapping, and the same tree can be tapped year after year, sometimes for over 100 years.

Maple syrup goes on pancakes and waffles, on porridge, into baking, and even onto bacon. In Quebec, families visit special 'sugar shacks' (cabanes à sucre) in spring, where they pour hot syrup onto fresh snow. As it cools it turns into chewy maple taffy you eat on a stick.

In the classroom

Walk your class through this in 15 minutes.

Talk together

Discussion prompts

  1. 01How can a tree's sap taste so different after being boiled for hours?
  2. 02Why might it matter that warm days and freezing nights are needed for the sap to flow?
  3. 03If 40 litres of sap make just 1 litre of syrup, what does that tell us about how special each bottle is?
Try this

Classroom activity

Bring in (or draw) 40 cups to represent 40 litres of sap. Stack them in a tower. Now hold up one cup - that's how much syrup you'd get from that whole tower. As a class, talk about other foods that take a lot to make a little (olive oil, honey, saffron).