i promised neil i would post a sugar brick recipe i recently tried. i am not sure where i found this.......somewhere on the net. it beats mixing up fondant and is rather simple. i have tried all sorts of methods for winter feed on the bees, fondant, winter patties, and a microwave sugar recipe.
mixing and messing with fondant is time consuming. winter patties ordered from my bee supplier is convenient, but can be expensive. the microwave recipe works good, but not for 5 hives. i had a number of 10 pd bags of sugar leftover from last year just waiting for an experiment............
one observation over the years using sugar in any form to feed bees during winter months, i think the bees tend to drag crystals out the front door if the sugar is not in a 'solid state'. yes, sometimes they don't need it and drag out and they can chew and drag it out, but i see less 'waste' on the bottom board or out the front door if the feed is in a more solid brick/patty, etc. i have posted two recipes.
the original recipe i knabbed somewhere off the net:
1st recipe:
BRICK SUGAR RECIPE #1
small batch:
1 lb. cane sugar
1/8 teaspoon sea salt (sea salt has natural occuring vitiamins and minerals, not sure if needed, but gave it a whirl)
1 1/2 oz. water
1 drop of lemon grass oil or whatever.......HBH...........or no essential oil, just skip the essential oil part.
• mix sugar with the sea salt and set aside.
• in a blender mix water and lemon grass oil on low for 4 to 5 minutes.
• add water and oil mixture to sugar and salt mixing well.
• press mixture evenly into a wax paper lined small cake pan.
• cut into squares while still soft.
• set aside and allow to harden.
large batch:5Lbs. cane sugar
7 1/2 oz. water
1/2 teaspoon sea salt
5 drops lemon grass oil, HBH, or just skip this
• mix sugar with salt and set aside.
• in a blender mix water and lemon grass oil on low for 4 to 5 minutes.
• add water and oil mixture to sugar and salt mixing well.
• press mixture into a wax paper lined 13″ x 9″ x 1/2″ cookie sheet.
• cut into squares while still soft.
• set aside and allow to harden.
here's how i did this. first off, not sure the essential oils/sea salt is necessary. i just added it anyway. bees like feed of any nature when they need it.
i did the large batch for 5 hives. i used a large cookie sheet, and a sheet cake aluminum pan you can buy from the grocery store........i liked this better.
one batch of the large goes into the cookie sheet, and two separate mixes of the large batch went into the aluminum cake pan.
i mixed the whole mess up with a kitchen aid (makes for quick work), (and did use the blender for the lemon grass oil/water). dumped the sugar mix into the pans lined with wax paper (don't do it without the wax paper) and flattened out with a rolling pin. cut slices. do this before the sugar hardens or you will be sorry you didn't.............
i put both pans in the oven at 170 d F, for about 6 hours. it wasn't enough. (the objective here is to dry out the water from the sugar so that the brick doesn't crack, break or crumble). i left in oven overnight with just the oven light on. this worked for the smaller cookie sheet, but not for the large sheet cake pan......this is about 1 and 1/2 inches thick? i put back in the oven just with the oven light on overnight........not dried/hardened, so i left the pan out for several days. (had the time and experiment). once the sugar is completely hardened the slices can be lifted out. (might have to slice again with a thin sharp knife to cut through the original slice and wax paper).
i think one can use the smaller weber aluminum grill pans, pie tins or even better paper plates. just pile your mix on, and let dry in the oven either with some low heat for a number of hours or in the oven with just the light on.
BRICK SUGAR RECIPE #2a beek friend of mine uses a sugar recipe mix of 12 pounds of sugar to one cup of water. he mixes it up with or without essential oils, piles the sugar mix on pie tins/paper plates; forms/presses it down and leaves in the oven with the oven light on for 10-12 hours and the 'bricks' slide off the paper plates.
i have not tried this yet. again, i would guess it depends on how much sugar is in the tin/plate for the time to dry down so is easily slipped into a hive without breaking up and crumbling.
hope this helps, and hope anyone who trys either of these methods will add to the thread..........!