BayouQueen
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Aug 8, 2014
- Messages
- 1,562
I keep on hand a bottle of Mrs. Butterworth's and a bottle of "pure." I mix the two -- both for cost and flavor.
Only real here, too. Grade A for drizzling on breakfasts and desserts, grade B for adding to meat glazes, salad dressings, and things like that. We also love butter/powdered sugar/lemon (Dutch Baby Pancakes!) and DH is a big fan of Lyle's Golden Syrup, so that's always in the pantry. We also use birch syrup and apple cider syrup.Only real, but we only have it about half the time. When I run out, I don't immediately buy new. If we're out, for pancakes I use either butter/powdered sugar/lemon or Lyle's Golden Syrup and pecans.
What are 'woke people'?woke people
I buy regular. I guess I didn't realize they make light maple syrup or sugar free maple syrup. It comes out of a tree--how do they remove the sugar?
Buying real maple syrup in a health food store?
There ain't nothin' "healthy" about maple syrup, despite what some snake oil PR people might say. They selectively pull certain statistics out of their butts while ignoring others. If anything, the claim should be "Real Maple Syrup isn't quite as horrible as the HFCS kind."
Oh, and much of the real maple syrup sold in tourist shops in those quaint Picture Postcard Perfect Vermont towns is produced in Canada. Even those that are bottled in Vermont. Quebec produces about 80%+ of the world's maple syrup. There just isn't enough produced in Vermont to satisfy demand. Practically every supermarket brand will say "Product of USA and Canada," wherever they can get it that week. Or a blend of both.