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by ars
5550 days ago
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If I gave bees sugar water would they make honey? No. At it's core honey is made by flowers, i.e. flowers do most of the work. Bees do some of the work, but a lot less than the flower does. I'm not saying there isn't a distinction between nectar and honey, of course there is. But there is also a distinction between raw honey, and the filtered, cooked, version you buy in a store. So should I say honey is made by beekeepers? |
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The difference between store-bought honey and the honey straight from the hive is minuscule, depending on the product in stores you compare it with. Here in Europe, it's against the law to call honey with added sugar 'honey'; that means that what you buy in a store in a jar labeled 'honey' is exactly what comes out of the hive. In many other places it's not regulated and there you can honey watered down with sugar (but that's usually all that's done to it, not processed further). When you compare '100% pure honey' from a store and the honey that comes out of the hive, the difference between the two is purely mechanical; it's just filtered to take out lumps and honeycomb, and that's it. The difference between nectar and honey is much greater - they are fundamentally chemically different. So it's much more of a difference as you make it out to be.
Also, honey is never 'cooked', because once it gets over (IIRC) 37 degrees Celsius, it looses much of its healthy properties because the enzymes break down after that.