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23 August 2006
Ask MeCha: Maple Sugar. Maple Syrup Powder. What's the difference? Of is there any? →[More:]
I have recipes that include Maple Syrup Powder. For the life of me I can't find it in Canada. Is this just an American term for Maple Sugar?
I've never heard of such a thing, but powdered sugar and regular sugar behave very differently in recipies, and imagine the same would be true for maple syrup powder...
You're exactly right, me3dia, it's for use in things that need to be sweetened without the moisture.
Oh, I know it exists. I just can't find it in Canada and don't like the idea of shipping food cross border.
I can easily find Maple Sugar (which is also powder-esque, and not a liquid) here, though, and don't know if they're just two terms for the same thing. I've emailed 3 sellers of the stuff online as well as the authors of the cookbook asking the same question as the FPP and none of them have bothered to respond.
Specklet, I won't be cooking the stuff, but will be using it in the crust of a tart shell. I've made it with maple sugar before and it tastes okay, I'm just trying to figure out if I should bother trying to find this powder stuff--if it'll bring the tart to a new level, or if doing so is wasting my time.
Looking at the instructions I'd say they're different things, but I could be wrong. Yep, always happy to help, even when I got nothin'. Also, what the hell's the point of dehydrated syrup when you mix it at a 2:1 ratio with water? Portability?
Totally different purposes/tastes. Find what the recipe calls for.
The main difference is going to be that the sugar has been boiled down from maple syrup, and therefore is going to have a much more concentrated flavor. Besides which, in baking, sugar is treated as a "wet" ingredient, while powdered things aren't.