Conflicting reports exist on the origins of maple taffy and
maple syrup. Depending on the source, maple syrup production began before or after the arrival of European colonialists. In the Northeast of the United States, tribes developed techniques to concentrate maple sap into sugar and candies, calling it "wax sugar." Lower Nlaka’pamux people also harvested the sap, but "they didn’t boil it in the olden days; they just used [d] it as a tonic." When the European colonists in the Northeast learned of these techniques, they quickly copied the practice of maple sugaring, including making these “wax sugar” treats. In the “Canadian Settlers Guide” it remarks that “the Indian sugar […] is not sold in cakes, but in birch boxes, mowkowks, as they call them.” It is reported that the sap within these boxes would be boiled and stirred constantly to ensure a smooth texture.
New England settlers in the 18th century spent the last weeks of the winter in “sugar camps” to manufacture
maple sugar for the year. While making sugar was the main objective of these camps, since it was simpler to store than syrup, it was also drizzled on snow to make immediate maple taffy. According to accounts of early American sugaring, this confection became known locally by a variety of titles, such as "jack wax," "sugar on snow," "leather aprons," and even "leather britches." While the
Iroquois gave the
Algonkian tribe the "ratirontaks" or "tree-eaters" designation, this term was likely derived from the "well-known habit of these tribes of eating the inner bark of trees in winter" as the Iroquois also consumed the maple sap. Each tribe has a distinct myth surrounding the maple sap and consequent maple syrup and taffy. The
Mohicans believe that when the snow melts in spring, it furnishes the tree with sap as the snow itself is "the dripping oil" of the celestial bear slain by the hunters in the wintertime.” For the
Menomini, the maple tree was once accidentally cut by Nokomis, who, finding out that the sap tasted sweet, gave some to her grandson Manabush. As he thought that the sap in its original state could cause idleness in women, he told Nokomis to dilute the thick sap, which would then create the syrup. The practice of making maple taffy does not appear in indigenous stories surrounding the creation and discovery of maple sap and syrup. ==Regions==