Beemaster's International Beekeeping Forum

BEEKEEPING LEARNING CENTER => GENERAL BEEKEEPING - MAIN POSTING FORUM. => Topic started by: Mici on August 07, 2006, 12:23:29 pm

Title: sugar vs. pure honey
Post by: Mici on August 07, 2006, 12:23:29 pm
Here's the thing. I'm to lazy to explain the whole thing but one thing has been bothering me since....i can remember.
On almost every honey label you can read: "pure honey crystalyzes after time, it's a normal process
Some honeys crystalyze even faster, such as beech tree honey (mana honeys). A week ago i harvested and the honey wouldn't go out, it crystalyzed in cells. I asked a beekeeper and he said that it's not honey and that the crystals are sugar, as if i fed the bees (which i didn't do).

so this led me to thinking:
Does artificial (made with a lot of feeding) honey crystalyze faster?

Does the sugar really crystalyze?

So the label is some kind of an excuse? Or are people just unaware?


To cut the chase( :P) Do both, natural honey and sugar crystalyze?

(hehe, now i've said it all, told you the whole story, and BTW all beekeepers here are whyning about crystalyzed honey in cells, especially this year)
Title: sugar vs. pure honey
Post by: Jerrymac on August 07, 2006, 01:55:14 pm
I live in the cotton belt and honey from cotton nectar crystalyzes very fast. I think sunflowers do to.
Title: sugar vs. pure honey
Post by: Dick Allen on August 07, 2006, 01:57:15 pm
The main sugars in honey are glucose and fructose.

Honey that contains more glucose than fructose will crystallize faster than honey that contains more fructose than glucose.

> To cut the chase( ) Do both, natural honey and sugar crystalyze?

yes, eventually.
Title: sugar vs. pure honey
Post by: Scadsobees on August 07, 2006, 02:02:42 pm
Even the sucrose that you may have fed to the bees gets converted to glucose and fructose.

So in effect it is all the same.  The crystals that would form in either are the same substance, sugar (glucose I think) .
Title: sugar vs. pure honey
Post by: Mici on August 07, 2006, 02:14:37 pm
well it surprised me how he occused me of feeding them or that they may have robbed someone elses bees that were fed.

so essentialy crystallization is what??water vapours out?? i think not since honey also crystalizes in airtight jars.

so crystalized honey is 0k for overwintering?(if it's not mana honey-forest honey)? i mean, it's ok if the sugar i feed for overwintering crystalizes?
Title: sugar vs. pure honey
Post by: thomashton on August 07, 2006, 08:02:26 pm
No, crystalization is not water evaporating out.
Crystalization occurs because honey is a product of evaporation though.

Honey is a super-saturated solution with sugar put into solution at higher levels than water can usually hold. I'm assuming more sugar is able to stay in solution in honey due to the heat of the hive. As in the kitchen or laboratory, you can force more solute (sugar in this case) into a super-saturated solution with the addition of heat to the solvent (water in this case).

These types of solutions are generally pretty unstable and it is common for the solvent to precipitate/fall out of solution easily. Essentially that is what happens when honey crysalizes. A seed (could be anything--a speck of dust, wax flake, toast crumb etc) begins the process by creating a rough surface for the crystals to form around. After that happens, the process can proceed rapidly.
Title: sugar vs. pure honey
Post by: Brian D. Bray on August 07, 2006, 11:46:31 pm
As stated all honey will crystalize over time.  Even a single spec of pollen can induce crystalization.  To reverse the process apply heat.  Put a jar of sugared honey in a sauce pan with water bath (like warming a baby bottle) and the honey will reconstitute itself.  I've know people to reheat the same jar of honey several times with no ill affects.

I've also found that honey can be reconstituted in a mircowave oven--just be sure to use a glass, porclean or mircowave safe plastic container.
Title: sugar vs. pure honey
Post by: Finsky on August 08, 2006, 09:05:03 am
When you feed household sugar to bees it does not crystallize in combs during winter.

Fructose remains as liguid in honey.
Title: sugar vs. pure honey
Post by: Mici on August 08, 2006, 11:00:38 am
thank you all for your answers. so it is far more likely that i have crystalized "forest" honey than sugar.

about warming up the honey. i know all that, but im surprised you didn't point out the MOST IMPORTANT thing about warming the honey!! temperature must NEVER exceed 40 degrees celzius!!! if it does, all the good things that bees "put" into honey are destroyed. So people who put honey into hot tea are making terrible mistakes. Also about using the microwave, i think it's a terrible mistake, we all know what devastating effects on different types of food. So you might wanna warn your friend.
Title: sugar vs. pure honey
Post by: Finsky on August 08, 2006, 11:26:55 am
Quote from: Mici
!! temperature must NEVER exceed 40 degrees celzius!!! .


What about a coup of tea? You cannot use honey in tea?  

I use multivitamin pills. I don't worry about heatings.

But if you read this beekeeping professor says that you may heat honey to 50 C and for 15 minutes  66 C.
http://www.masterbeekeeper.org/creamhoney.htm

.
Title: sugar vs. pure honey
Post by: Mici on August 08, 2006, 11:37:22 am
Code: [Select]
The most satisfactory method for controlling honey spoilage is pasteurization

this is why you have to heat it. but i haven't heard about spoiled honey, i even heard that they uncovered some tomb in egypt or somewhere and it contained EDIBLE honey. you just have to store it in cool and dry place, like most of foodstuffs.

Yes, you can use honey in a cup of tea, but if tea is too hot, you will ruin the healthy ingredients, as if you sweetened it with sugar. this is a well knonw fact around here, i'm a bit surprised/shocked.
Title: sugar vs. pure honey
Post by: Finsky on August 08, 2006, 11:48:06 am
Quote from: Mici
Code: [Select]
The most satisfactory method for controlling honey spoilage is pasteurization.


That sentence seems mad when it is away from it's context. Of course the best method to avoid spoiling honey is extract  honey as capped.  

To me honey is not so mysterious stuff that I make from it difficulties to my life.


.
Title: sugar vs. pure honey
Post by: abejaruco on August 08, 2006, 01:36:55 pm
Quote
you can use honey in a cup of tea, but if tea is too hot, you will ruin the healthy ingredients
(alt+q)
If you are aphonic, because you have a cold, boiling a lemon with two spoonfuls of honey is a good traditional medicine, drinking it  you can sing having a shower the next day. If you eat a lemon with honey without boiling, is different, you will not sing so fast.
I think that hot honey just before consume can´t lose properties as you think.

 :roll:
Title: sugar vs. pure honey
Post by: Mici on August 08, 2006, 02:02:44 pm
it could be, i can't argue with you on this one. BUT :) , traditional medicine can sometimes be very...unlikeable (i know it ain't a word).
1.) the belive of many that lemon has a lot of vitamin C, wrong, orange if better so is paprika
2.) by boiling ANYthing you destroy most of the good stuff such as vitamin C
3.) traditional sometimes isn't so traditional (how long has the lemon been in practical use)

the main thing about home healthcare is in my opinion BELIEVING, so as long as you believe it helps, it really does. don't stop using it. but when it comes to molecular stage, i'm almost certain that by exceeding 40 celzius you destroy a lot.

I'm really sorry for being such an as*  :)
Title: sugar vs. pure honey
Post by: Finsky on August 08, 2006, 02:04:00 pm
Now when I extrcat honey, I eat it quite much from my fingers. I am not healthier at all.   Where it helps? Do I have it?
Title: sugar vs. pure honey
Post by: Mici on August 08, 2006, 02:21:05 pm
Quote from: Finsky
Now when I extrcat honey, I eat it quite much from my fingers. I am not healthier at all.   Where it helps? Do I have it?


i don't get your point, sorry.

and about you not being healthier. hmm, but you could be worse, isn't that true?
Title: sugar vs. pure honey
Post by: Finsky on August 08, 2006, 02:46:52 pm
[quote="Miciand about you not being healthier. hmm, but you could be worse, isn't that true?[/quote]

I hope not. My age is 59,5 .  Bees make me healtier when I have interesting hobby.
Title: sugar vs. pure honey
Post by: Mici on August 08, 2006, 03:05:08 pm
Quote from: Finsky

I hope not. My age is 59,5 .  Bees make me healtier when I have interesting hobby.

but you just said I am not healthier at all :wink:
jep, bees do take good care of their keepers.

this is all too much writting for a simple advise:
If you eat honey for medical purposes, eat it unprocessed and not overheated. you can either take my advice as if it was said by Dr. TheMostFamousDoctorInTheWorld or you can throw it in the garbage.[/i]
Title: sugar vs. pure honey
Post by: Finsky on August 08, 2006, 03:16:49 pm
Quote from: Mici
[

this is all too much writting for a simple advise:
If you eat honey for medical purposes,


Honey is sugar. I am not so simple that I keep honey as medicin.

It is not medicin at all. All beekeepers are awfully sick because they are so old.  I have not noticed any difference in them compared with "normal" person.

Here you have 199 pages all kind of "natural" medicins.  Don't trust only on honey  :P
http://www.feelgreatgetfit.com/category.php?c=1051&page=199&show=1


In Finland we have old proverb: If spirit, tar or sauna do not help, so  grave will give help to you.

.


.
Title: sugar vs. pure honey
Post by: abejaruco on August 08, 2006, 03:37:02 pm
Well Mici, I am not a Shaman, I am not looking for the Fountain of Youth in the lemon, like Ponce de León in Florida, and I am not saying you that it is good to drink the "Balsam of Fierabras" or all-healing balm. I live in my century. :lol: Spanish don´t live in a collective spell. We have doctors.
But you have to agree that essence of medicinal plants is distiled using high temperatures.
Boiling lemon with honey you obtein something different, a "tertius genus" -chemical- that is not cold lemon with honey on the rocks -physical-. Lemon is not only vitamin C.
Lemon was introduced in Spain together with orange and sugar cane by the Arabs in medieval times from Asia. Arabs invented the alambique to distil the plants. Saladine had the best doctors and schools where learnt Jews and Arabs while the Christians had the better "butchers".
Don´t be sorry,
Better to drink one day "boiled lemon with honey" than whole life cold tea.
 :wink:
Title: sugar vs. pure honey
Post by: Finsky on August 08, 2006, 03:45:57 pm
Quote from: abejaruco
,
Better to drink one day "boiled lemon with honey" than whole life cold tea.
 :wink:


Yes C-vitamin. When you boil it is destroyes.

Eskimoes eat fresh flesh. So they get C-vitamin from animals. White people heat the flesh and they get lack of C-vitamin.
Title: sugar vs. pure honey
Post by: Mici on August 08, 2006, 03:48:18 pm
i'm sorry for expressing myself so ackwardly. by saying "medicine" i ment, like in case of cold or something like that. so, if you wanna get rid of a nasty cold, it might be better to eat a spoon of honey and drink tea later on, than to mix it, while the tea is hot.
i never said i trust only the honey, there's also propolis, wax.... :twisted:
hehe

we have almost the same,actually it's an answer: the soil will reliefe it.
Title: sugar vs. pure honey
Post by: abejaruco on August 08, 2006, 05:07:22 pm
Here in the south, the vitamine C is destroyed when the cold wind came from your northern countries
 :lol:
http://img443.imageshack.us/img443/4516/mamafotos020qr4.jpg
Title: sugar vs. pure honey
Post by: Finsky on August 08, 2006, 05:27:24 pm
Quote from: abejaruco
C is destroyed when the cold wind came from your northern countries
 :lol:


I read news from cold farts. Are those in picture those "and retrieved one of several small balls of ice there"
 
http://www.humorshack.com/archive/jokes/miscellaneous/3.shtml

.
Title: sugar vs. pure honey
Post by: Brian D. Bray on August 08, 2006, 11:13:45 pm
Everybody seems to be discounting the effect of chemical reactions: ingredients combined cold act one way but when combined under heat they react differently, which is why hot honey and lemon juice works better than cold honey and lemon juice.

With chemical reacts you can take 2 items that might be considered poisonous by themselves and create something that is too often over consumed--like salt.
Title: Re: sugar vs. pure honey
Post by: Ben Framed on January 20, 2022, 11:07:52 pm
An oldie but a goodie....

Phillip