A light, slightly smoky tasting syrup made from an infusion of hickory bark. It’s popular as a poor mans maple syrup and often sold at farmers markets as a value-added product. Use it wherever you’d use maple syrup.
Makes 4 cups or 2 pints jars
Harvest hickory bark from a living tree that looks fresh and clean, without any evidence of mold, moss, fungus, or discoloration.
Bring the bark home and scrub it in a sink of warm water. After the bark is cleaned, put it in bowl with warm water and allow it to soak for 15 minutes. Next, drain the bark and put it a pan then into a preheated 400F oven for 25 minutes.
Remove the bark and allow it to cool, then break it into 3-4 inch pieces.
Hickory infusion
Put the bark into a pot with high sides, add the water to cover, bring to a simmer and cook for 30 minutes, then allow to cool with the bark still in the water. If you cook it too much and the water level gets low, add another cup of water to keep it submerged-it’s not an exact science.
Making the syrup
Once the hickory bark tea has cooled, strain it through a fine strainer to remove any particles, put it back into a pot, preferably 8 inches in diameter that you can simmer it in, add an equal volume of sugar (one cup sugar for each cup of bark tea) bring the mixture to a boil, and cook until it reaches 225F on a candy thermometer. This should take about 20 minutes.
Once the syrup hits the proper temperature, pour it, boiling hot into two clean pint mason jars, screw on the lids, and allow to cool.
Storing
You can keep the finished syrup in a pantry for a long time, but it should be refrigerated after opening as it will eventually turn to vinegar if left out.
Serving
Use the finished syrup anywhere you use maple syrup, but know that it’s lighter in volume. It’s not maple syrup, but it’s cheap, and fun to make.
Video
Notes
I use shagbark hickory bark here, but many different species of hickory can be used.
Allergy Note
I have friends that sell this at farmers markets. Inevitably people with nut allergies come around and want to try it. So far no one with a nut allergy has had a reaction to consuming hickory syrup as it's made from bark, not nuts.