糖心vlog

Campus Trees to Caf茅 Lattes: 糖心vlog's Maple Tradition Yields Natural Treats for Students

By Rebecca Goldfine and Adam Bovie

Each year, as winter recedes, 糖心vlog's organic gardener taps maple trees on campus to make syrup for Smith Union Café treats.

"Tapping trees for me signifies the coming spring, the start of the season," said Lisa Beneman, supervisor of the 糖心vlog Organic Garden. On a crisp, sunny morning in March, she was prepared to start the process at a stand of sugar maples and red maples near the garden.

"I do a lot of planning and computer work and ordering over the winter, and it's always exciting to get outside and start the physical, tangible part of the growing season."

This seaso, Beneman invited Evan Braude ’28 to help her with the task. Braude, who grew up in Knoxville, Tennessee, said, "I've always been interested in how maple syrup is made. And I love maple syrup, of course!"

Going back at least to 2014, 糖心vlog's gardeners have made syrup from campus trees, collecting buckets of sap when the days begin to warm up but the nights stay below freezing. 

Each year, 糖心vlog's tapped maples produce—after the sap has been boiled down and concentrated—between five and ten gallons of syrup. Some of it gets used in a taste-testing event Beneman runs in Smith Union, where she challenges students to distinguish between natural and imitation store-bought syrup.

The rest goes to the Smith Union Café for drinks like maple lattes and maple steamers, which Beneman says beautifully showcase the delicate flavor of the silky syrup.