Drain the Swamp Maples

A chef and a naturalist team up to tap trees

Adam Erace
Heated

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Photos: Adam Erace

There are two fridges in the Sugar Shack at Camp Creek Run, 50 protected acres wedged between South Jersey’s Pine Barrens and a P.F. Chang’s. Phil Manganaro has unofficially leased one as off-site storage for Park Place, his critically acclaimed 32-seat restaurant in nearby Merchantville (currently operating, like so many others during the pandemic, for pick-up only). Inside are Jersey foragings from last spring, summer, and fall preserved in deli containers and freezer bags: ramps, greenbrier, wild mustard, persimmon pulp, spruce tips, Mountain Ash berries, spicebush berries, cherry blossoms that taste like nothing when plucked and brightly of floral cherry taffy when pickled. But we’re not here for any of that. We’re here for swamp maple syrup.

Manganaro met the camp’s director, Keara Giannotti, when his son, Dean, was part of her EcoKids program a few years ago. “He was one of the only men; it’s all mothers,” Giannotti remembers. “He never really talked. Then one day I mentioned matsutakes — they grow in a secret spot here — and how I didn’t know how to cook them.”

Manganaro piped up: “In butter, and don’t forget the shallots.”

The chef and the naturalist bonded over a love of wild food. Giannotti knew swamp maples, aka red maples aka Acer rubrum…

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