I have one jar of honey, Good Flow pure wildflower raw honey costs me about $10 for 16oz
My mom has a bottle of honey, says 100% pure honey no corn syrup, product of Mexico, cost her $4 for 12 oz
Lots of msm says honey at grocery stores is fake
What's the reality?
Honey, otherwise known as liquid gold, is one of nature’s purest foods. Raw, unpasteurized honey (honey that has not been heated, and still contains all of its beneficial nutrients and enzymes) contains a whopping 22 amino acids, 27 minerals (like calcium, iron, iodine, manganese, phosphorous, zinc, potassium, calcium, magnesium, and selenium), and vitamins like vitamin A, C, D, E and K, as well as the entire B-complex. The live enzyme content of honey is also one of the highest of all foods. Not to mention, it is highly anti-microbial, anti-bacterial and anti-viral .
Honey has been around for centuries both as a sweetener and healing agent. Back in ancient times, honey was mainly used in religious ceremonies to pay tribute to the gods, as well as to embalm the deceased. Only those who were wealthy could afford to use honey in food.
The ancient philosophers, Aristotle (384-322 BC) and Aristoxenus (320 BC) even touted the benefits of this golden elixir. Aristoxenus claimed that “anyone who eats honey…for his daily breakfast will be free from all diseases throughout his lifetime.
The father of medicine, Hippocrates, also used honey as the foundation for many of his medicinal concoctions. As the healing properties of honey became widely recognized, its production flourished. It was even used on the battlefield in World War I in a medicinal wound cleaner (Dakin’s Solution) invented by the chemist Henry Drysdale Dakin.
However, as honey production soared, so did the ways in which it was manufactured. Today, most honey on the market is so over processed and pasteurized at high temperatures that little, if any, healing properties are left over.
According to the FDA, as well as the food safety divisions of the World Health Organization (WHO) and the European Commission (EU), in order for honey to be considered authentic, it must contain pollen. If honey does’t contain pollen, it isn’t real honey, but fake honey. Without the presence of pollen, the FDA cannot determine whether the honey is from legitimate and/or safe sources.
Food Safety News decided to test over 60 different samples of store bought honey for pollen – and the results were astounding.
Over 76% of grocery store “honey” had NO pollen in it! These were stores like TOP Food, Safeway, Giant Eagle, QFC, Kroger, Metro Market, Harris Teeter, A&P, Stop & Shop and King Soopers.
100% of honey from Walgreens, Rite-Aid, and CVS Pharmacy had no pollen.
77% of honey sampled from stores like Costco, Sam’s Club, Target, and H-E-B had the pollen filtered out.
Commercial honey sold in supermarkets are ultra-filtered, a process that involves heating the honey to high temperatures that kills off any beneficial nutrients and enzymes, adding water to dilute it, and then filtering it using high pressure technology to remove pollen.
This technique is similar to the one used by China and India, who export tonnes of tainted honey, which leaves officials unable to track its origins. According to Food Safety News, 60% of imported honey comes from Asian countries that are traditional laundering points for Chinese honey.
According to Mark Jensen, president of the American Honey Producers Association, any ultra-filtered honey should be avoided. “In my judgement, it is pretty safe to assume that any ultra-filtered honey on store shelves is Chinese honey and it’s even safer to assume that it entered the country un-inspected and in violation of federal law.
In the normal honey-making process, honey is filtered to remove bee parts, waxes and other debris. This filtration process does not disrupt the nutritional value of the honey, however, as almost all of the pollen remains intact (thereby making it much more shelf-stable). This is much different from the high-temperature, high-pressure extraction process whereby all of the pollen is removed.
Below is a list of honey tested by Food Safety News that showed no traces of pollen. This list is not all-inclusive, as not every brand has been tested:
– American Choice Clover Honey – Archer Farms Orange Blossom Honey – Archer Farms Organic Classic Honey – Busy Bee Organic Honey – Busy Bee, Pure Clover Honey – CVS Honey – Fred Meyer Clover Honey – Full Circle Pure Honey – Giant Eagle Clover Honey – GE Clover Honey – Great Value, Clover Honey – Haggen Honey, Natural & Pure – HT Traders Tupelo Honey – Kroger Pure Clover Honey – Market Pantry Pure Honey – Mel-o 100% Pure Honey – Natural Sue Bee Clover Honey – Naturally Preferred Fireweed Honey – Rite Aid Honey – Safeway Clover Honey – Silver Bow Pure Honey – Stop and Shop Clove Honey – Sue Bee Clover Honey – Thrifty Bee Honey – Valutime Honey – Walgreen MEL-O Honey – Western Family Clover Honey – Wegman Clover Honey – Winnie The Pooh, Pure Clover
How To Recognize Cheap, Knock-Off Honey Use this guide to determine if your honey is fake.
– Always read the label; if it contains added glucose or high fructose corn syrup, it is not real honey.
– Taste your honey; if you can taste hints of flower or herbs, you know it’s real honey. Fake honey is just sweet, with a very faint “honey-like” flavour.
– Put a small drop of honey on your thumb. If it spreads it is not pure, since pure honey should stay in one place (by small drop, I mean the size of the head of a q-tip. Obviously liquid honey from the farmers’ market is going to be runny).
– Add a few drops of vinegar into a mixture of water and honey. If it foams up, your honey has been adulterated with plaster!
– If your honey does not “crystallize” with time, it is likely ultra-filtered, since pure honey will crystallize when you keep it in your fridge, or left at room temperature for an extended period of time.
– Add a few drops of iodine to a glass of water and then add some honey. If your honey turns blue, it has been combined with corn starch and is not real honey.
– Place a dab of honey on the end of a matchstick and light it. If it ignites, it is pure.
– Place a spoon of honey in a glass of water. If it dissolves right away, it is fake. Pure honey will not dissolve in water and will sink to the bottom of the glass (without rigorously stirring, of course).
If honey has crystallized does that mean I should throw it out?
No. you can return it to liquid by heating it in a pot of hot water.
If it is sold in a grocery store, I would be suspicious. Farmers markets are heaps good.
Also, if store-bought "honey" begins to crystalize at the bottom of the bottle, I've read that means that it's not real or pure honey.
You have it backwards. Pure honey will crystallize over time.
Ah, OK, learned something new.
Heard the opposite - real honey WILL crystalize over time
Maybe others here can clarify that point.
Who knows any more. I know its definitely not the same taste as farm fresh honey. My pastor is a bee keeper so he sells honey and its soo good. We also had a huge bee hive in our church that we had to take down and we got to try wild honey which was seriously the best honey I have had
A lot of the cheaper honey is either diluted with less expensive sweeteners mixed with substances that are honey-like in consistency or highly filtered (which allows them to stretch the honey out and give you less of the good stuff in a larger container.
Raw, unfiltered, local, and organic are the types that aren't as altered, with raw being the best bet if you want honey that is the most similar to the stuff that comes straight out of the hives.
So, if you're just buying honey for the taste and don't care if it has some sugar or corn syrup, grab the cheap stuff. If you want something that doesn't have added sugar or corn syrup, you can probably get away with the generic higher prices brands (often labeled pure). If you wants as much benefits as possible, head down to the farmer's market and grab some local honey (wouldn't hurt to ask them if it is raw or unfiltered before buying, raw having the most benefits, unfiltered is up there too though, but it usually is pasteurized or strained, which means it is slightly altered but not so much that it kills most of the good stuff.)
I have no idea how this applies to foreign honey, but I'd stay away from anything from China.
Chyna honey is asshoe.
Raw honey will crystallize in the jar within couple of days. You won't find it in any of the stores. We buy raw honey from honey bee folks who transport their bees to different fields. They bottle the honey and sell it for about $10.00/qt as added income. Ask around, someone in your area knows who sells it.
Local honey, preferably as close to your home as possible. The closer you are to the honey production, the more tailored to your needs it will be.
Check out Manuka honey. Type of honey that has extra anti fungal and anti bacterial properties.
It's the best but it's speeendy.
Buy local, buy local, buy local... we can get ours with the comb.
If you can, buy local honey. If you use local honey it’s supposed to help you to not have local allergy/pollen issues. I think that’s a totally cool example of honey, and our honey bees magical natural ecosystem. That’s for the post OP - that’s excellent info!
If its cheap it's probably agave or corn syrup. Good honey should be bought at a farmer's market where the person with the hives sells it.
I buy Lady Bee raw honey. Comes from Argentina, packaged in Miami. It's fairly a good price for raw honey. At Walmart, it's $9.83 for 32oz, it use to be like $7 something but after inflation it went up. Buying local raw honey from Florida was a few dollars more. I've been buying it for a couple of years now. I assume it doesn't have any filler, taste pretty good to me though.
No comment on the "reality" of grocery store honey, but figured this would "bee" of interest. - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9ItlOFLTUAs
Cold slung raw honey .... the best .... as only a beekeeper can do that ...
Yes, it's either diluted or an outright fake. The FDA has carefully avoided enforcing stuff like this. I've heard the same about olive oil, too.
Fwiw, the article I read about honey years ago said the only major grocery store that did not sell any fake honey was trader joe's. But it's easy to find local.
If you want to convince your mom, get some local honey and do a side-by-side taste test.
Honey is bee vomit, just sayin'
Look for honey from local bee-keepers. It even helps with pollen allergies. Like homeopathic allergy treatments. If you ate someplace where you can get orange blossom honey, I think it is the best in the world.
Corn syrup
Download the app Yuka and scan the label of the honey. This app should tell you what is actually in the bottle.