Brushing my Teeth with Birch Sap
Where do you get your
drinking water from?
As a child of the water-rich Great Lakes State, this wasn’t
something I was forced to ponder very often.
Water simply appeared. At
restaurants, it was placed along with silverware. In my kitchen, I turned a
silver knob like a princess and out it cascaded into my glass.
Michigan: We've got water. |
In college, I fell into a righteous enragement over the
issue of bottled water. Something was
fishy about a system where a multi-national corporation (cough cough, Nestle,
world’s 53rd largest corporation) was allowed to drain the aquifers
of Mecosta and Osceola County Michigan, take the captured water across state
lines (to bypass drinking water standards), bottle in it petroleum product (17
million barrels of oil are used in the production of water bottles each year),
use more energy to transport and distribute the water (it takes 3 times the
amount of water to produce a bottle as it does to fill it) and sell it for
1,000 times the cost of tap water (aka, the way it was) to the profit of large,
foreign companies.
Studying water in Thailand |
Spending my junior year in Thailand I got an actual taste of
what happens when public resources are privatized. When companies take over the market, the
incentive for maintaining safe drinking water as a public resource evaporates.
Something to be
grateful for
After all this confusion, living in a dry cabin in Alaska
finally set me straight. In summer I
haul water in buckets in a wheelbarrow and catch it from the rain. In winter I chop clear cuts of ice and melt
buckets of snow. Clean water is the
reward for keeping an ecosystem in balance.
Clean water is something to be grateful for.
Birch sap season
Goldstream creek in the spring: you don't want to drink that :) |
All of this set me up perfectly to deeply appreciate birch
sap season in Alaska. During breakup the
creek water is especially unpalatable and the swamped trails are especially
unfriendly to hauling heavy containers.
Luckily, this is the time of year when water flows from trees! Birch trees that is. This year David showed me how to hollow out a
small branch and make a tap to share in the tree’s harvest of sap.
We drilled small holes and tapped in our flute-like tubes
gently with a hammer and soon there were fountains of sap dripping steadily
into tied-on buckets. Putting in the
taps was a delightful experience. I
tried to catch the first few drops with my tongue like a child catching
snowflakes. Birch sap contains only 1
percent sugar, and tastes like a more natural form of Gatorade. It is famous for its vitamin C content,
minerals, and detoxification qualities.
I also like it to counter-act seasonal allergies associated with birch
pollen. Straight from the tree, it is
what my mom calls “perfectly cool,” like a martini. Early in the morning, the buckets are topped with flakey shave-ice. We fed it to friends as dessert with a splash
of cranberry juice.
Savoring the Sweet
this is more or less what our trees look like, with less green around birch season |
We set up five taps around our yard and with sunny days, each
tree was soon producing up to 4 gallons a day.
We had more sap than we could handle!
While David was off hunting beaver, I tried my best to start boiling it
down. I filled the biggest pot I could
find and stayed up all night feeding a fire that barely affected the sap but
turned the cabin into a sauna. Luckily, the front yard is covered with wood scraps from w winter of heating with wood, so picking up pieces for my fire was like spring cleaning. Nonetheless, boiling
down sap is a big job. For just one
gallon of syrup, you need 100 gallons of sap.
I came home from work the next day to discover that David had unwittingly
bathed in my “syrup!” The results were more
soft than sticky.
Without a freezer, distillery, or ample time to tend fires
all day, I decided to delight in birch sap in its season and leave it at
that. It would have to be a limited edition
commodity this year, and we enjoyed it all the more. We cooked beaver meat in sap, we washed
dishes in sap, we brushed our teeth with sap (counterintuitive, but delightful)
we even gave the dogs their own birch sap cocktails. Of all
the ways I get water, there is nothing better than drinking it straight from a
tree.
PS- my enjoyment of birch season was so "in the moment" that I forgot to take pictures! Thanks to the internet for these ones I borrowed.
I find that sometimes a quick rinse of the mouth — water only — once a day is all it takes. But that's just me.
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