by Maxwell Eaton III
2020 / 32 pages
A coat and toque-wearing bear is going to show us how to make maple syrup from scratch, starting with harvesting the sap, and going step-by-step all the way through the process of boiling it down to syrup. He’s got a couple of friends to help along the way (though for some reason this dog and squirrel don’t need clothes to stay warm).
Everything is quite cute – pictures are drawn in a cartoon-style complete with some word bubbles.
Our guide is quite the expert, showing us all the steps. Did you know not all maples are alike as far as sugar content? So, it begins with picking the right trees and then figuring out how deep to drill in. There were a surprising number of tools used: drills, hammers, buckets, and more. While the payoff is sweet, there is a lot of work involved. It takes forty gallons of sap to make one gallon of syrup!
Cautions
Everything is great here, but I’ll mention that in some of Eaton’s other books, he’ll throw out an evolutionary reference here and there.
Conclusion
What could be more Canadian than a picture book about making maple syrup? Well, they do make it down in the States too, but for the really good stuff, you need sap from the land of the Maple leaf (and the Maple Leafs for that matter).