Jump to content

Fascinated by honey

Fascinated by honey

jeresinex

9,427 views

If there's one natural food (aka can be eaten raw) that I absolutely love, it's honey. Yes, there are countless varieties from around the world, but for this story, we'll talk about the kind that comes straight out of a hive, complete with honeycomb.

I'm not an expert on this topic, but every time I consume raw, unprocessed honey, it tastes a lot better compared to honey that comes in a jar. No squeeze-bottle honey for me, please.

Perhaps it's just my imagination, but raw honey doesn't leave me with that cloyingly sweet taste that seems to go on forever. I love it when it's paired with toast with slices of butter or with Greek yoghurt with granola on the side.

Admittedly, I get drawn to drinks with honey, too. Lots of bubble tea shops sell a version of 'green tea with honey', and I always find this hard to resist. I must constantly remind myself to save the calories for the actual honey with honeycomb that I prefer.

Now, apart from the lovely viscous food itself, I'm also fascinated (but only a little disturbed) by how it's produced by thousands of honeybees.

The process is intriguing. Each honeybee carries a little nectar back to its hive before digesting it to break it down into simple sugars and regurgitating the product into an individual honeycomb.

For the honey to become viscous and gooey, the bees use their wings to fan the honeycomb to heat it and reduce the moisture content. Yes, honey is regurgitated nectar (eww), yet it's delectable and delicious.

Another interesting fact is that honey is also food for the bees. So, when beekeepers harvest it, they ensure to leave enough so that the colony survives to make more honey. Fascinating.

– Jeremy

(Main image: Benyamin Bohlouli, Unsplash)




0 Comments


Recommended Comments

There are no comments to display.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Japan: The trend that became a turn-off

    Ahh Japan. The destination that many travellers desire. The perennial trending subject on social media. Japanese cuisine, culture, quirks, technology, and everything kawaii have inspired endless posts, stories, reels, YouTube videos, and TikToks. If one didn't know better, you'd think it was the dream destination on this planet. While I love the food, the service and the shopping, the sheer number of tourists (me included) has become a turn-off. I'm not talking about those who inconven

    jeresinex

    jeresinex

    Germany is weird, too

    As we've previously established and regularly highlighted, Japan is pretty weird.  And as it turns out, Germany's kinda weird, too:  m2-res_720p.mp4 The above video has been making its rounds on social media, and the simplest description of it is that it's a game where they are trying to cut an object (here, a pretzel) EXACTLY in half. It's pretty amazing that the person actually succeeds, but the fact that this is a game at all (on TV, no less) is fascinating.  Schlag d

    bobthemob

    bobthemob

    5 ways the Polestar 2 Core Edition proves less can be more

    With a less-is-more approach, the Polestar 2 Core Edition offers a more value-for-money entry into the Swedish brand.  What first comes to mind when you think of Sweden? IKEA, and probably ABBA. But there's plenty more that has come out of Sweden besides flat-pack furniture, meatballs and impossibly-catchy pop songs. Founded as a standalone brand just eight years ago and headquartered in Torslanda, Sweden, Polestar is a design-forward electric performance brand that wants to put its Sc

    clarencegi75

    clarencegi75

    The fun in collecting postcards without (really ever) sending them

    I believe I may not be alone when I say that I’m quite the avid collector of postcards, but rarely ever send them out to family or friends. To some, this might seem counterintuitive, even wasteful. But for me, these miniature works of art serve a different purpose. They're windows into distant lands; time capsules of bygone eras; and conversation starters par excellence. In fact, in a city as fast-paced as Singapore, where our lives often revolve around our vehicles and the next destination

    donutdontu

    donutdontu

×
×
  • Create New...