The Official U.S. Maple Syrup Almanac -- 2017 Alamanc_2017 | Page 51

By PAUL POST B ob Hausslein took a good idea, started running with it and hasn’t stopped yet. About 15 years ago, while roasting a pig, he stumbled across the idea of making smoked maple syrup, which as fate would have it, turned his entire life and business around. “Chefs down in the big city were exploring new flavor com- binations as part of the then current ‘molecular gastronomy.’ One of them asked me to run with this riff of smoke and sugar we had found, and the category was born,” Hausslein said. “We are originators of Smoked Maple Syrup, and have been produc- ing and selling it since 2005 at least. We don’t have a patent on the process, which is basically to expose the syrup to real wood smoke in some form. I sure have turned a lot of folks on to the idea, though.” His firm, Sugar Bob’s Smoked Maple Syrup, started out in Londonderry, Vt. “We take process-controlled maple wood smoke, and bub- ble it through real maple syrup using special valves and food grade compressed air,” he said. “ Nothing else is ever used. Just real maple wood smoke, gener- ated at very specific tempera- tures, infused into real maple syrup. That’s it.” However, in May, Hausslein purchased a separate company, Vermont Maple Sriracha, and moved the entire operation, except his sugarhouse, to Rut- land, where he leases space at the Vermont Farmers Food Center. Srirach is a traditional hot U.S. Maple Syrup Almanac sauce from Thailand. “The move to Rutland has been fantastic,” Hausslein said. “We have our syrup, our smoked syrup, and the maple sriracha in three varieties -- srira- cha coated cashews and peanuts, and our smoked maple barbeque sauce heated with Vermont Maple Sriracha.” A Boston Globe food critic gave rave reviews. “The nuts are crunchy, spicy and addictive,” the Goble said. “Like the sauces, they’re a deli- cious balance of heat and sweet, with a little tang and an under- lying hint of maple.” 2017 Soon, plans call for making smoked maple almonds and smoked maple sriracha, which can be used as a flavoring for chicken wings. “We’ve grown steadily over the years and were looking for a new modern facility to work in,” Hausslein said. “We already sold our smoke maple product