USE MAPLE SUGAR to Hisoricaly Sweeten Your Trade Food !
Indigenous peoples living in northeastern North America were the first groups known to have produced maple sugar. According to aboriginal oral traditions, as well as archaeological evidence, maple tree sap was being processed into syrup long before Europeans arrived in the region.
The beginning of spring sent Indian men in search of muskrat pelts. They separated from their women and children, who moved their camps into the sugar bush. These camps labored to create enormous stores of maple sugar, which would sustain the community for the rest of the year. In good years, they were able to make enough for their own consumption and extra to trade. Women could exchange maple sugar for the manufactured goods that had transformed their lives in the early nineteenth century.
At the beginning of the spring thaw, they used stone tools to make V-shaped incisions in tree trunks; they then inserted reeds or concave pieces of bark to run the sap into buckets, which were often made from birch bark. The maple sap was concentrated either by dropping hot cooking stones into the bucket or by leaving them exposed to the cold temperatures overnight and disposing of the layer of ice that formed on top.Most critical for women were the kind of metal kettles they traded for. Normally used for routine cooking, these pots were filled with sap in March. The sap boiled for days until it was reduced to sugar, which could be packed into birch bark containers.
During the 17th and 18th centuries, processed maple sap was used primarily as a source of concentrated sugar, in both liquid and crystallized-solid form, as cane sugar had to be imported from the West Indies.& was $$$,so Maple Sugar was a great trade item.
Also the local Indigenous peoples showed the arriving colonists how to tap the trunks of certain types of maples during the spring thaw to harvest the sap & By 1680, European settlers and fur traders were involved in harvesting maple products.
Indian women normally made the maple sugar that was such an important part of the traders' diet & what they often traded for items they needed (Pots,awls,needles,blankets ETC.