Sweet facts you never knew about honey
Buzz-worthy honey facts
Spread on toast or drizzled over natural yogurt, honey is one of nature’s finest foods. Known to help people recover from sore throats and other illnesses, it’s what you might call a “superfood”. Here we find out how it’s made, why it's similar to wine and other buzz-worthy facts.
Honey is the only insect-derived food
Though we get many useful products from insects such as silk, red dye and shellac glaze – and in some cultures beetles, bees, ants and crickets are eaten – honey is the only natural product insects make that humans consume.
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Plant nectar turns into honey in bees’ stomach
Honey bees don’t make honey out of nothing. It starts as nectar extracted from flowers using bees’ long tube-shaped tongues and is stored in their second stomach (known as its crop) as they fly around. Here it mixes with enzymes which change its composition and make it more suitable for long-term storage.
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Honeycomb is bees’ foodstore for winter
When honey bees arrive back at the hive, they pass nectar to house bees by regurgitating it. House bees repeat the digestion process, before storing it in their honeycomb. At this stage, it’s not syrupy like shop-bought honey. The bees have to fan it with their wings to make the excess liquid evaporate. Once ready, it’s sealed over with wax and saved for winter when food is scarce.
Beekeepers only take what’s extra
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28g (1oz) of honey is enough to fuel a bees’ flight around the world
28g (1oz) of honey (the amount in one of those individual size pots you’re given at cafés and restaurants) would provide a bee with enough energy to fuel a flight around the globe.
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One bee makes a 12th of a teaspoon of honey in its lifetime
Despite bees’ ability to produce a massive amount of honey as a hive, they produce a surprisingly small quantity as individuals. One bee will only make a 12th of a teaspoon of honey in its entire life.
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To make 500g (1lb) of honey you need 550 bees
To be able to fill a 500g (1lb) pot of honey would require 550 bees and the nectar of two million flowers. Luckily, one colony of bees contains between 20,000 and 60,000 of the ingenious insects.
You can buy honey in different forms
The pots of clear, golden pasteurised syrup you find in the supermarket are only one form of honey. You can also get comb honey (which is still sealed inside the bees’ wax comb), raw honey (which is unprocessed, contains pollen and wax, and is susceptible to crystallising), and granulated honey (powdery, dehydrated honey).
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There are hundreds of varieties of honey
Have you noticed how honeys come in different shades? The colour of honey depends on the type of flowers bees visit. Minerals such as calcium, magnesium and iron in the nectar give it its colour. In the US there are at least 300 different types of honey, for example avocado, eucalyptus, orange blossom and clover.
Its colour tells you something about its taste and nutrition
The general rule is clear and light honey is mild tasting and dark honey is bold tasting. It has also been found that darker honeys have more antioxidants than light honeys.
Table honey is usually a blend of honeys
If a bee visits one type of flower, you get mono-floral honey which is the most prized and expensive, for example manuka honey. If bees’ nectar source is varied, multi-floral honey is produced. However, sometimes producers choose to blend honey, particularly honey supplied in bulk, to make it more consistent.
Honey has vintages like wine
China produces the most honey in the world
It may come as a surprise to find out most of the world’s honey comes from China. It produces far more than other countries, making 444 million kg (444 thousand metric tons) in 2019. In comparison, Turkey, in second place, produced a quarter of that.
Honey is one of the most faked foods in the world
We regularly hear about counterfeit handbags and pirated movies, but less frequently of fake honey. It’s estimated a third of honey has been modified, for example flavoured, darkened, diluted and wrongly labelled. There’s far more honey in circulation than it’s physically possible for the world’s bees to have produced.
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Manuka honey can only be made in Australia and New Zealand
The prized condiment costs a small fortune but what goes into manuka honey? Real manuka honey is made by bees that pollinate manuka bushes in New Zealand and Australia. It’s a chemical in the flower’s nectar that gives it its miracle bacteria-destroying properties.
Honey is used to make the world’s oldest alcoholic drink
Mead, the alcoholic drink of choice of the Greeks, Romans and Vikings, is produced by adding yeast to honey-water and allowing it to ferment for several weeks. Mead can be sweet, dry or flavoured with fruit. It’s also coming back into fashion.
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Humans have eaten honey for almost 9,000 years
The earliest evidence for humans eating honey dates back 9,000 years to the Stone Age. At the time the world was coming out of an Ice Age and agriculture was just beginning. Ancient pottery from Europe, the Near East and North Africa has been found with traces of beeswax showing the first farmers were beekeepers.
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Honey never goes bad
Due to its lack of water, acidity and hydrogen peroxide, honey can last for thousands of years and never go bad – bacteria cannot survive in it. When archaeologists were excavating Egyptian pharaoh Tutankhamun's tomb, a 2,000-year-old jar of ready-to-eat honey was found.
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Romans used honey to pay tax
The Romans loved honey. They were avid beekeepers and responsible for bringing the species to the UK. They used honey in cooking and dressed wounds with it to prevent infection. It’s even reported they used honey to pay tax.
Honey was used in medicine
Due to its antibacterial properties, honey has been used in medicine for centuries. Ancient records show it was a favoured treatment for wounds. The sticky substance creates a barrier on the skin preventing moisture and dirt from getting in and causing infection.
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Honey can fix hay fever
Not only can honey be used to treat grazes and sore throats, it can help people with allergies. Just like a vaccine, the small quantities of pollen in raw honey build up immunity without being enough to cause a full blown reaction. So come summer when pollen is in the air, hay fever sufferers are more ready to tackle it.
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Honey could help boost brain function
You shouldn’t give honey to babies
Though it’s very unlikely, honey should not be given to children under the age of one as it can cause a rare but serious illness called infant botulism. Botulism is a bacteria that lies dormant in dust and soil and occasionally gets into honey. Because babies’ intestines are young and undeveloped, it’s more difficult for them to combat it.
Humans aren’t the only animal that likes honey
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Not all honey is made by bees
Honeypot ants are insects found in North America and Australia, which instead of building a hive, store honey in their stomachs. They can grow as large as grapes and are edible and eaten by tribes. Meanwhile, the Mexican honey wasp stores honey in trees which is enjoyed by indigenous people.
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Honey isn’t the only thing we’ll lose if bees become extinct