I'm pretty sure it started at 7:00 am. Since we are a couple of sleepyheads, our efforts to get there at a reasonably early hour saw us walking into the downtown at around 8:30 am.
We slipped into town on back roads, and parked at our friends' house, as we knew from previous experience that the main road into town would be crazy. However, that meant we didn't get to park on the outskirts and ride into town on a haywagon pulled by a tractor.
We sussed this place out right away as the place we wanted to get lunch. Those are smoked turkey drumsticks on the grill, but they had lamb, beef or chicken pitas as well. The smell was tantalizing.
So far, at 8:30, the crowds are manageable.
The main street of Elmira is filled with booths selling food, food products and crafty things; some of them local clubs and organizations raising money, some of them local suppliers, and some of them folks who make the rounds of various fairs and festivals as their business. Even a few maple syrup vendors there. The food is definitely a lot more interesting than the crafts, I would have to say.
This is the line-up for the pancakes. We didn't go for them. They are pretty ordinary pancakes, however good the syrup. Plenty of people do have them though; they serve about 15,000 pancakes and 725 litres of maple syrup.
We had these pancakes instead. The line-up was much shorter!
Stemmler's is a local producer of cold cuts and other processed meats. They had a booth serving food to eat on the spot, as well as this one, selling meats to take home.
Another syrup vendor.
Funnel cakes! There were several people selling these, as well as apple fritter sellers. You could have gotten a deep-fried Mars bar here, if you wanted. I saw a few people walking around with them. A little scary if you ask me!
Local bee-keepers with honey and beeswax candles.
Here's a picture of a few of the cooks at the main pancake kitchen. They have quite the assembly line going...
...they are at just one of about 4 or 5 long griddles.
The line-up from another angle.
And from another angle...
By now the crowds on the main street were extremely thick. I could have taken a version of this picture over and over, everywhere on the street. It was pretty much standing room only.
Dill pickle onna stick! C.M.O.T. Dibbler should try his luck with these! At $1 per ginormous pickle, they struck me as one of the better deals and a great antidote to all the greasy and sugary food around.
The festival goes on to about 5:00 pm, or until people go home (much earlier during bad-weather years) or when everyone runs out of food. We declared ourselves stuffed, broke and worn-out after lunch, and so headed home for a quiet afternoon of digesting.
p.s! Don't forget to look under Maple and Honey in my index to the right for some maple syrup recipes.

5 comments:
A maple syrup festival sounds like fun! I will have to keep an eye out for some Ontario maple syrup. I know there is a shop at the St Lawrence Market here in Toronto that sells Quebec maple syrup year round.
J-E-A-L-O-U-S.
The event itself is so great both here and in Quebec but the crowds would make me claustrophobic.
I was searching through your photos to see if I could see my mom and brother who were there also. I was at the Elmira Festival last when my daughter was still in a stroller. Of course out west here there is no maple syrup. I wait for my kind relatives to send me some:D I do have some birch syrup though produced in Abbotsford.
It was a great event, although I did find the crowds a little overwhelming. And I'm not usually bothered by crowds.
Valli; I assume you didn't see them in my pics! I also know I wasn't the only food blogger there that day.
Kevin Kossowan, if you want to come and stay with us next year so you can attend, you are welcome to do so... all you need to do is bring B-A-C-O-N.
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