Honey
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Honey
© Denzil Green
Bees make Honey by collecting flower nectar and returning it to the hives to be food for the hive.
The colour and taste of the Honey will vary depending on what flowers the bees took the nectar from. Generally, the lighter the colour, the milder the taste. The strongest Honey flavours come from buckwheat, heather and pine flower. It takes about 12 Honeybees their entire lifetime to produce a teaspoon of Honey.
Comb Honey
Comb Honey is a raw Honey-filled wax section of the hive (the wax is edible.)
Chunk Honey
Chunk Honey is a section of the comb.
Processed Honey
(Extracted Honey
)Processed (or "extracted") Honey has been extracted from the comb, and filtered to remove solids and impurities and to help reduce crystallization. When pasteurized, it will generally be liquid and good for drizzling.
Raw Honey
Raw Honey is thicker and good for spreading. It is unpasteurized.
Creamed Honey
Sometimes you will also see "Creamed Honey", which is Honey that has been stirred by machines to introduce air to make it opaque, creamy and thick for spreading. The benefit to the producer is that the air introduced lowers his Honey costs.
Honey shouldn't be given to children under five as all types of Honey, even processed and pasteurized, can contain spores that very young children can't tolerate. The spores can cause botulism in their stomachs (adults contain flora in their intestines which prevent this.)
Many of the beneficial enzymes that Honey contains can be destroyed by heating, so don't think you're actually making a cooked dish more nutritious by using it rather than Honey.1 cup = 12 oz weight = 350g The shelf life of Honey is practically years, if in a tightly sealed container. It stores well because it has such a low moisture content. If it goes cloudy or crystallized, it can be restored with gentle heating in a microwave or simmering pot of water. Do not refrigerate.

Honeycomb
- © Denzil Green
Greeks and Romans used Honey extensively as a sweetener, for making some wines, and to preserve food in.
Toxic honey can be produced if the bees have gathered nectar from toxic plants in which the toxin is also present in the nectar, for instance, flowering rhododendrons.
Xenophon was a Greek military commander in 401 BC who had to lead 10,000 Greek soldiers on a retreat out of Persia after they'd been defeated by the Persians. The story of their retreat through Kurdistan, Georgia and Armenia is recorded in a book called the "Anabasis." At one point, near Trebizond (the present-day Trabzon in northeastern Turkey), his men harvested honey from some beehives they found, but the soldiers became sick, weak and disoriented, vomiting and unable to move.
Some 334 years later, Pompey camped his armies near Trebizond. The enemy that he was campaigning against (the forces of Mithridates, king of Pontus) placed toxic honeycombs where Pompey's troops would find them, which they did, and ate them. While they were ill, the enemy fell upon the sick Roman soldiers and massacred them.
The bees in both cases had likely fed off rhododendron, as Pliny the Roman historian in fact guessed, as well as azaleas and oleanders. Discordes (c.40-90 AD) also noted the toxic honey in this area and pinned its cause down to the same flowers. Pliny noted that the people of the area were also unable to sell their beeswax; he called their honey "meli maenomenon" ("mad honey".)
The actual compound that is toxic is a type of "grayanotoxin." Some species of rhododendron are more toxic than others. The compound is also present in the "Mountain Laurel" in America.
"Mad honey" was used in small quantities added to alcohol as a sort of recreational drug. Many Greek religious activities such as prophesying may have been done with mad honey added to mead to induce a small amount of madness to create a mind-state fit for prophesying.
Europeans introduced Honey bees to America in 1625.
"Thus may we gather honey from the weed, and make a moral of the devil himself." -- William Shakespeare (26 April 1564 – 23 April 1616. Henry V, Act IV, Scene 1.)
"When, like the bee, culling from every flower the virtuous sweets, Our thighs pack'd with wax, our mouths with honey, We bring it to the hive, and, like the bees, Are murdered for our pains." -- King Henry IV, Part 2. Shakespeare. -- William Shakespeare (26 April 1564 – 23 April 1616. Henry IV, Part 2.)
"No, truly, unless thou wert hard-favoured; for honesty coupled to beauty is to have honey a sauce to sugar." -- Touchstone in As You Like It. Act III, Scene 3. Shakespeare. (26 April 1564 – 23 April 1616)
St Ambrose is the patron saint of bee-keepers. The Irish patron saint of bees is Saint Gobnet (a woman.)
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