OXON_121223_615
Existing comment: Sweet Sorghum:
This antique machine is a sorghum mill. With a mill like this, a horse, plenty of sorghum stalks, and evaporating pan, and years of experience, you can make sweet sorghum syrup.
In the early 1900s, farm families used sorghum syrup like molasses -- in baking, on biscuits, and to make candy, gingerbread, and pudding. Sorghum syrup was often called sorghum molasses (thought it comes from the sorghum plant and molasses comes from sugarcane or sugar beets).
Sorghum mills were usually made of two or three upright rollers fitted close together. A long wooden pole called a sweep was attached to the top of the mill and horse was harnessed to the sweep. As the horse walked around the mill in a circle, the rollers turned.
Stalks of the sorghum plant were fed into the mill by hand and crushed by the rollers. The bright green sorghum juice dripped out into a barrel. When enough juice was gathered, it was strained and poured into a large evaporating pan.
The sorghum maker had to keep a slow fire burning under the pan, stir the juice constantly, and skim off impurities that rose to the top. The right temperature was crucial for keeping the syrup hot for three or four hours boiling or scorching. As the juice cooked, it turned dark green, thickened, and finally reached a dark, clear amber.
A sorghum plant looks something like a cornstalk without the ears. A large cluster of tiny seeds sits at the top. Today, varieties of sorghum grown anywhere from about four to fifteen feet tall. Farmers usually plant sorghum in May or June and harvest near the first frost.
The leaves and seeds usually fatten up livestock. But some seeds also end up as bird food, and around the world people grind sorghum seeds into flour for cooking. The juice for sorghum syrup comes only from the stalks.
Sorghum originated in African and came to the United States during the slave trade.
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