This is going to be a deep dive, but I know we have at least 1 maple guy around here. So..
We bottle Maple to 16.0 fluid ounces (most of our other product is by weight). It's worked out that average density of maple syrup being 11.02 lb/gal comes out to 1.4lbs, or 635 grams per bottle. (we do 634g, I'm assuming to adjust for overfill issues in the past).
My issue is that FREQUENTLY this still causes over fills, maple gushing over the top of the bottles. More research has shown me that the density swings seasonally (looks like spring is slightly higher brix= higher density). This is where my research gets muddy and I can't find any good answers...
How are maple packers adjusting for density? Are you using fill levels instead of weight exclusively? My brix swing is very minimal (spec is 66-68.9°Bx hard stop). I wouldn't think that would be enough to over fill jugs and I can't find a correlation to high brix and overfill (although I have very minimal data, this is an issue processing recently alerted me to).
Hoping a maple gal/guy has some insight. I can't keep going out there and licking up all the spilled delicious warm maple even if I want to (guys it smells so good in the plant when we're running maple you don't even want to know).









