* Webmasters note: This story was taken from the Boston Globe, I left the original link to the story at the bottom of the page.
It may be organic, but it isn't maple syrup
Amid old-fashioned tins and traditional glass bottles filled with his own syrup, Morse examines a big plastic bottle of Shady Maple Farms Certified Organic Pancake Syrup that a reporter has handed him. "They call it organic?" Morse asks indignantly. "Well, all maple syrup is organic. Our trees are organic."
His reaction may be common sense, but it's not the law. Two-year-old USDA regulations spell out what can be labeled organic, and by design, several new products on the market qualify. This month, as Morse and other maple syrup producers across New England collect sap from sugar maples and tend to evaporation pans, two companies are hoping to tap into the market with certified organic "pancake syrups."
The products are made from bona fide ingredients that add up to something you might pour over pancakes. They're somewhat higher in real maple syrup than standard-issue supermarket syrup, and they're priced lower than Vermont's pure nectar. Sorrell Ridge Organic Syrup (the label reads "100% Real MAPLE flavor") and Shady Maple Farms Certified Organic Pancake Syrup ("A Natural Choice") are made from all organic ingredients and, as such, are available in natural foods markets across the country. The companies making them hope to profit from consumers' growing appetite for anything organic.
Neither purports to be maple syrup: By law, only 100 percent pure maple syrup may be labeled as such. Everything else is "pancake syrup," though whether most consumers know the difference is an open question. Fashioned by food technologists, the new organic syrups tout corn syrups and cane sugars (both organic) on their ingredient lists.
Shady Maple's version contains 4 percent real maple syrup, according to the company's director of export sales, Marlene Jolicoeur. Ironically, the Canadian company is primarily a distributor of pure maple syrup. Sorrell Ridge syrup, which went on the market 10 months ago, contains "natural maple flavor," but no maple syrup is listed as an ingredient. Fred Ross, CEO of Sorrel Ridge's parent company, Allied English, says that the company is reworking the product and the "new and improved" syrup will contain 10 percent organic maple syrup, high by industry standards. A display at Morse Farm Maple Sugarworks gives the percentages of maple syrup in several leading brands of (nonorganic) pancake syrup: Mrs. Butterworth has none; Vermont Maid contains 2 percent.
Big sellers like Aunt Jemima, of course, wouldn't know a maple tree if one fell on them. To go with your flapjacks, Aunt Jemima Original serves up helpings of hard-to-pronounce ingredients such as sodium hexametaphosphate and sodium benzoate, along with cellulose gum, salt, sorbic acid, caramel color, and artificial flavor. (This is billed as "warmth, nourishment and trust" on the company's website.)