- Honey - Mayo Clinic
Honey is a sweet fluid made by honeybees using the nectar of flowering plants There are about 320 different varieties of honey, which vary in color, odor and flavor Honey contains mostly sugar, as well as a mix of amino acids, vitamins, minerals, iron, zinc and antioxidants In addition to its use as a natural sweetener, honey is used as an anti-inflammatory, antioxidant and antibacterial
- Honey: An effective cough remedy? - Mayo Clinic
Several studies focusing on the common cold suggest that honey may help calm coughs in adults and children over 1 year of age
- Honey B Gone - Beesource Beekeeping Forums
What do people who have used Honey B Gone think about the product?
- Diabetes foods: Can I substitute honey for sugar? - Mayo Clinic
Generally, there's no advantage to substituting honey for sugar in a diabetes eating plan
- what size filter do you use to strain your honey?
Greeetings! What size screen do you recommend to filter my honey? 200? 400? Any advice you can give me to avoid cloudy honey would be great!
- Bad honey? Honey separated, the crystalized part is. . .
I bought a lot of honey when traveling, but now the honey is separated, and I am concerned whether something was added to the honey to cause the separation The crystalized part is very fluffy and like snow, but very light
- Foam on honey - Beesource Beekeeping Forums
This honey is 19% moisture and has been consistently year to year after harvest In the buckets it was clear and fine but when I poured it into my bottling bucket it got really light in color (air) and when it settled out it had this foam layer and it won’t disapate Anyone definitively know
- Dead out Honey - What to do with it. - beesource. com
This leaves me with (when combined) about 10 frames of honey as well as honey, pollen, and nectar Should I save that and put it on a struggling hive this winter? Should I extract and bottle what I can and feed the rest back to the bees somehow? How do I know if my frames are fomenting and if it is still good?
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