Is all bee's honey the same?

Is all bee's honey the same? - Top View of Bees Putting Honey

At the supermarket, I found many different brands and varieties of honey. Each came from a different place, but most were marketed based on flower-type. I bought a few different brands, but could not identify a difference.

Does the taste of honey vary depending on which flowers the bees lived around? Or are there other factors that create variety in the taste?



Best Answer

It's ALL different from year to year - from season to season, from area to area. Honey is nectar that has been converted to an invert sugar by the bees. Then moisture removed to < 18%, then sealed with wax over the comb.

The flavors and quality depend 100% on where the bees are collecting the nectar. I have found no difference in the type of bee, however. Some bees collect more nectar, work longer hours, swarm easier, and have other traits that make life easier for the bee keeper, but in my apiary - I found no preference to the flavor of one type of bee over the other. (Italian vs. Carniolan, vs. Caucasian). Some were a bit different because I think some flew earlier and foraged longer, and may have gotten nectar that was from different mix of flowers.

There is also almost NO true "organic" honey. This is because you cannot guarantee that a bee ONLY has access to property that falls under the organic guidelines. With a flight radius of 2 Miles or more, thats a LOT of acres that would have to be certified 100% organic.

Most Clover honey will usually taste about the same, mesquite, about the same - but having sampled lots of it - it DOES change from season to season and area to area. Various regions and seasons have different mixes of flowers and trees producing nectar at any given time, and that is what flavors the honey.

For the best honey, get Pure, Unfiltered, Raw honey, from a Local source. You may try a farmers market. It's a hot, hard job, and the pay is not so great, but most beekeepers (as most other farmers) do not do it for the big bucks - but for the love of the land, the bees, and farming. Note that some honey may be adulterated by the use of pesticides that are not allowed in the USA. And some large companies buy honey from anyone and any place and it all gets mixed together.




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Is all bee's honey the same? - Swarm of Bees



What are the 3 types of honey bees?

A honey bee colony typically consists of three kinds of adult bees: workers, drones, and a queen. Several thousand worker bees cooperate in nest building, food collection, and brood rearing. Each member has a definite task to perform, related to its adult age.

Which type of honey is best?

Manuka Honey One can't have a list of the world's best honey and not include Manuka Honey. Hailing from New Zealand, Manuka Honey is known for its medicinal properties (Manuka Honey has more antibacterial properties than any other type of honey in the world) more so than it's taste.

Which honey is the healthiest?

1) Manuka Honey: As Hunnes hinted at, manuka honey \u2014 which is made in Australia and New Zealand by bees that pollinate the native manuka bush \u2014 is commonly believed to be the godfather of healthy honeys.

Does all honey taste the same?

Honey Color and Flavor - It all depends on where the bees buzz. The color and flavor of honeys differ depending on the nectar source (the blossoms) visited by the honey bees. In fact, there are more than 300 unique types of honey available in the United States, each originating from a different floral source.



The Bees Go Buzzing | Kids Songs | Super Simple Songs




More answers regarding is all bee's honey the same?

Answer 2

Clover is generic in the US, there are other very cool varieties but they might not be as easy to find.

Grocery store clover honey is pretty much a commodity, I buy 5 pound bottles of Sue Bee Clover Honey, made in Iowa, for less than $15. Watch for phonies: How to tell if it is honey, super filtered honey, or corn syrup?

Wildflower and Orange Blossom are not terribly rare, and can sometimes be found on grocery shelves. The differences between these "grocery store" varieties are pretty subtle, but they're there. As Kogitsune noted in comments, sometimes you can get lucky and find more interesting honey in the grocery store.

From Honey at Home

The color, flavor, and even aroma of a particular variety of honey may differ depending on the nectar source of flowers visited by the honey bee. The colors may range from nearly colorless to dark brown, the flavor may vary from delectably mild to distinctively bold, and even the odor of the honey may be mildly reminiscent of the flower. Varietal honeys may be best compared to varietal wine in terms of annual climactic changes. Even the same flower blooming in the same location may produce slightly different nectar from year-to-year depending upon temperature and rainfall.

Special honey is a boutique kind of item. Around here (Alaska), Fireweed honey is big.

1 (from above link)


From Amazon

2

Buckwheat honey is very rich and almost black.

Checking out honey varieties is really pretty exciting, but you're not going to find much at the local mega-mart. These are usually small-batch, specialty items. Look at the link at the top of this answer, it goes into very nice detail.

Answer 3

There are, or were, supermarkets which stock multiple distinctly different honeys. The one I went to about a decade ago made a point of having a range available; I grew very fond of sage honey, for example.

If you check farmers' markets you should be able to find "wildflower" honey (ie, whatever the bees happened to gather, possibly blended from multiple hives), and if the vendor has an orchard or other large farm which they're using bees to pollenate, they'll be likely to have honey mostly gathered from those flowers.

Given the problems bees have been having recently, it may be more difficult to find specific honeys than it used to be. You may have to resort to mail-order.

Some vendors have been suspected of stretching honey by adding sugar from other sources. I don't know whether there's any truth to that or not, but shop carefully.

Answer 4

Most widely-available brands (store brands or big name brands) of commercially available honey will be very similar and have essentially the same composition. It doesn't matter what brand you purchase if you're using it for cooking.

Sources: Stack Exchange - This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Exchange and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.

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