What Exactly Is RAW Honey?

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  • Опубликовано: 2 окт 2024
  • Taking a leaf from our fermentation journey, let's dive into another flavorful saga: the difference between raw and regular honey. You see, raw honey is the unprocessed, unheated bee nectar that's akin to the pristine morning dew. On the other hand, regular honey undergoes a form of pasteurization and filtration, a little like adding a riff to an already groovy tune. While both are sweet players, raw honey hits a high note with a fuller flavor profile and more nutrients, a real headliner in the taste and health departments. And hey, just like with fermentation, it's the journey of each ingredient that counts. Rock on! 🤘🏼 Adam
    #RawHoney #Honey #FoodScience #Food #Cooking #Ingredients #CookingTips #CookingTipsAndTricks #BeginnerCooking #OmnivorousAdam

Комментарии • 8 тыс.

  • @AdamWitt
    @AdamWitt  Год назад +1648

    You know what goes great with (hot) honey?... Pizza: ruclips.net/video/yrnvipV5EXc/видео.html&ab_channel=OmnivorousAdam

    • @AMD7027
      @AMD7027 Год назад

      Pasteurization is done to destroy sugar-tolerant yeasts in honey...sort of something important isn't it or do you just post misleading crap to get rage posts. Oh, and pasteurization does NOT remove pollen...that would be FILTRATION. Looks it is time you stopped drinking.

    • @alwayshangrygirl463
      @alwayshangrygirl463 Год назад +63

      Microwaving or heating honey otherwise destroys all the goodness of honey. You might as well eat sugar

    • @religionisapoison2413
      @religionisapoison2413 Год назад +31

      ​@@alwayshangrygirl463 lmao ikr. Complaining about the processed stuff because it's heated and then proceeding to microwave the raw honey...

    • @nomad875
      @nomad875 Год назад +6

      ​@@alwayshangrygirl463true not a lot of people know that

    • @sunsetsleeper
      @sunsetsleeper Год назад

      Someone who loves honey but is allergic to pollen pasteurized that mf

  • @garretisla5282
    @garretisla5282 Год назад +16878

    Honey lasts indefinitely. They literally found 2000 year old Roman honey on a shipwreck, solidified in a large ceramic pot. They heated it back up, clarified it, and then ate some. They said it tasted delicious, albeit different than other flavors. That was because the flowers that the bees fed on were different!

    • @nicholascanada3123
      @nicholascanada3123 Год назад +826

      Same with ancient Egyptian honey

    • @Enneamorph
      @Enneamorph Год назад +1496

      @@garrettcooper58People that know that honey keeps, _almost literally, _*_forever._*

    • @garretisla5282
      @garretisla5282 Год назад +518

      @garrettcooper58 it doesn't expire. It crystallizes, allowing you to store it forever. And most bacteria from then wouldn't be able to be successful given today's pharmaceutical advantages. The sheer amount of drugs, not to mention the old strains have literally no pharmaceutical resistance, let alone the difference in herbal remedies, since even the plants are different than theirs. earl

    • @Nakkiteline
      @Nakkiteline Год назад

      ​@@garrettcooper58why you think there's anything more dangerous we don't know about in that honey that some roman bloke might have had? like, if the honey had some kind of superflu, it would have killed a ton of people and we would know about it today. if it had something like black plague in it (honey was from different time so not possible) we would have cure nowadays. i think there's no such risk, and the experts probably know very well if there would be, otherwise they obviously wouldn't have consumed it. smart people don't just go ahead and try something ancient if they don't understand the possible adverse effects on it. it's not 1940s where scientists just pray that they don't ignite the whole atmosphere while trying atomic bombs.

    • @creampielover69
      @creampielover69 Год назад +256

      ​@@garrettcooper58considering how underdeveloped roman medicine was (at least compared to modern standards) don't you think a super flu would've wiped out the majority of the civilized world back then?

  • @dutchvanderlinde8900
    @dutchvanderlinde8900 Год назад +31801

    Honey's shelf life is longer than the shelf it sits on. We have edible honey from ancient tombs in egypt

    • @RadioMan2023
      @RadioMan2023 Год назад +895

      Does it taste good?

    • @babypluto08
      @babypluto08 Год назад +3664

      ​@averageDaftPunkenjoyer Yup, they ate it but tasted differant since bees used differant flowers

    • @Imstillaround9x19
      @Imstillaround9x19 Год назад

      @@babypluto08different**

    • @StinkyPoopyMcFartFace
      @StinkyPoopyMcFartFace Год назад +826

      Yeah but I think Raw Honey can harbor botulism or something if it isn't stored correctly. Wasn't that the issue with the Pink Sauce bitch or something?

    • @rVnsunshine
      @rVnsunshine Год назад +1480

      @@StinkyPoopyMcFartFacethat wasn’t because of the honey. Pure honey will not get botulism, ever. Sugar is the most natural preservative there is. I don’t even think it can get regular old mold.

  • @Legolasicek
    @Legolasicek Год назад +42501

    “Extends its shelf life” :D .. lol, honey doesn’t have a shelf life.

    • @derekmendoza1690
      @derekmendoza1690 Год назад +8042

      That's what small honey wants you to think. Trust big honey, buy more honey when your honey expires

    • @TronisEdison
      @TronisEdison Год назад +2935

      @@derekmendoza1690”honey” weird ass word😂😂😂 you know when you see a word so much it just looks weird af

    • @NasaMilkMan
      @NasaMilkMan Год назад +1214

      it does lmao, it stays edible but when sat for a long period of time it becomes crystalized and basically stale

    • @Hettdizzle
      @Hettdizzle Год назад +3041

      ​@@NasaMilkManand then you heat it up and it's honey again

    • @conductorcammon
      @conductorcammon Год назад +1294

      Was just about to comment the same thing. They found honey in Egyptian tombs that was edible.

  • @Fumozart
    @Fumozart 5 месяцев назад +204

    taking a bite off a chunk of the bee hive itself is a completely different experience lol, way more fun to eat honey like that

    • @NeonKue
      @NeonKue Месяц назад +36

      Especially with the whole hive of bees stinging you, a bittersweet pleasure.

    • @Fumozart
      @Fumozart Месяц назад +12

      @@NeonKue Well, the one i ate was bee-less(?)... When I found it, there were no bees to be seen nearby, even after i had finished eating it there...

    • @sonofastudstudios4552
      @sonofastudstudios4552 Месяц назад +6

      @@FumozartI’ve always wanted to eat honey like that 😋

    • @Fumozart
      @Fumozart Месяц назад

      @@sonofastudstudios4552 Well, you could talk to bee keepers who sell their honies lol

    • @dvargas3553
      @dvargas3553 22 дня назад +2

      Are you talking about honeycomb..?

  • @charlesj.easleyii7642
    @charlesj.easleyii7642 10 месяцев назад +5851

    Fun fact: pasteurization extends the shelflife of honey from 5,000 years to 5,010 years 👍

    • @membles69
      @membles69 8 месяцев назад +261

      Thank god. 🙏🙏

    • @CarlosDaBird
      @CarlosDaBird 8 месяцев назад +387

      now my 500th dog’s child can eat honey yay

    • @fordmodelT1957
      @fordmodelT1957 8 месяцев назад +125

      Thank you - I’ll remember that for when my Martian Museum finally opens and I need to pillage my old pantry for artefacts

    • @RachelAnnPotter
      @RachelAnnPotter 8 месяцев назад +11

      Lol 🎉

    • @EBIX_BENIS
      @EBIX_BENIS 8 месяцев назад

      You think the honey you have in your home is real and pure? 😆 it's just sugar water with some chemicals that has shelf life of 2 years buy a honey bottle and leave it for 2-3 years you will see what I mean.

  • @missqueenbee3063
    @missqueenbee3063 Год назад +4365

    Beekeeper here, 3 things. 1) DO NOT microwave honey. It kills off the microbes in the honey that are good for you. 2) Honey doesn’t expire. It crystallizes. Simply reheat in a bowl of warm-hot water (refer to #1) 3) just a friendly reminder to never give honey to infants under 12 months. Please ask your doctor if you have questions.

    • @elizlikethequeen
      @elizlikethequeen Год назад +82

      THANK YOU FOR PROTECTING THE BEES!!! ❤❤❤❤

    • @zacharythebeau163
      @zacharythebeau163 Год назад +82

      "Kills of the microbes" ah yes because the fact that honey is antimicrobial and kills everything but botulism isn't enough🤦 it might denature some enzymes, but it isn't killing anything. In fact microwaves don't in general which is why you still have to reach a certain heat to still when cooking with it, otherwise you could eat for raw as the microwave passes through the entire item. That being said warm water tends to do better and keeps it from crystalizing as fast.

    • @missqueenbee3063
      @missqueenbee3063 Год назад +176

      @@zacharythebeau163 The microwave kills of anything good that was there to begin with. Yes, honey does contain botulisms spores, that’s why you can’t give it to infants. Their immune systems are not strong enough yet to fight it off, but ours are (unless there are underlying issues). So, yes honey is antimicrobial, but some microbes are good and end up being useless after the microwave.

    • @dcs1414
      @dcs1414 Год назад +9

      Thank you. My sister's a beekeeper and I''ve helped in the operation a lot.

    • @chrisy.tet77
      @chrisy.tet77 Год назад +8

      This should be boosted

  • @MultiPcExpertGhost
    @MultiPcExpertGhost Год назад +4187

    This guy is the reason we have an expiration date on himalayan salt.

    • @abby_zeller
      @abby_zeller Год назад +486

      The salt doesn't expire, the plastic container does. After some time, the plastic of the container begins to break down and contaminants the salt, making it unsafe to use. Salt is totally fine in and will not expire in glass containers. You could always buy the salt in plastic, but store it in glass or ceramic

    • @NoHobbes
      @NoHobbes Год назад +7

      Right????

    • @causedisland6056
      @causedisland6056 Год назад +47

      @@abby_zeller dude no i dont think so, please look up how long it takes plastics to degrade. that's why we have such an issue with people not recycling

    • @stippystips9418
      @stippystips9418 Год назад

      well plastic water bottles do the same and thats why it's advised to not always drink from plastic bottles@@causedisland6056

    • @caliber5302
      @caliber5302 Год назад +231

      ​@causedisland6056 please look up the definition of degradation next time, yes plastic can take years if not centuries to completely break down, however, in that time it is constantly leaking out the chemicals that were used in creating the plastic, and in the plastic itself, think of placing a ball of dirt in a bowl of water, the dirt ball will remain a ball for a decent amount of time, but the water around it will still get dirty, the plastic of the container will remain a solid piece of plastic, but whatever its containing will get that chemical leakage from the plastic over time

  • @muhammadalhaarthy9023
    @muhammadalhaarthy9023 5 месяцев назад +35

    As a beekeeper our honey comes out of the hive in the crystal look what you are calling pasteurized or regular.

  • @GZC6555
    @GZC6555 Год назад +1732

    Honey does not have a shelf life. When it's heated, it is to keep the honey from crystalizing for a longer time. When it does start to crystallize again, it can be rewarmed in a warm water bath. Just keep the honey from getting water in it. I'm glad you like honey! So many benefits when used in moderation. I used to help my family when we had bees.

    • @Stickiestboi
      @Stickiestboi Год назад +29

      Also pasteurization kills off bacteria, which raw honey can carry

    • @elvenadohostil8607
      @elvenadohostil8607 Год назад +3

      I put honey in my superficial injuries, heals perfectly.

    • @GZC6555
      @GZC6555 Год назад

      @@elvenadohostil8607 also good for sore throats!

    • @piercexlr878
      @piercexlr878 Год назад +12

      ​@@StickiestboiIf memory serves honey has some natural antibiotic properties. Part of the reason it doesn't expire

    • @Stickiestboi
      @Stickiestboi Год назад +7

      @@piercexlr878 It can still carry certain bacteria, particularly raw honey ,it does not kill 100% of them

  • @jthunter8529
    @jthunter8529 Год назад +971

    As a beekeeper that Honey looks more like creamed honey or granulated then raw honey, you intentionally cream it to use as a spread by adding dextrose crystals and stirring it, while granulated is the same reaction done unintentionally. also you do not microwave honey you should slowly heat it by submerging it's container in boiling water or it will recrystallize quickly

    • @tislukey4289
      @tislukey4289 Год назад +52

      My dad used to beekeep and it just looks like honey blended with wax because I’ve never seen honey like that during our process.

    • @jthunter8529
      @jthunter8529 Год назад +4

      @@foolishlyfoolhardy6004 ahh do you mean like the cappings as well as the comb? That's an interesting way to process it, I'll have to try sometime

    • @wisefries4205
      @wisefries4205 Год назад

      @@foolishlyfoolhardy6004 I visited their website, on the Raw Honey product page it lists:
      **Naturally raw honey crystallizes rather
      quickly. This product is often in a smooth yet crystallized state at the
      time of purchase**
      And on the only picture I found on the jar, it says it MAY contain small amounts of wax, pollen and propolis, naturally, rather than it being added.

    • @wisefries4205
      @wisefries4205 Год назад +3

      @@jthunter8529 read my comment above.
      Also if you ever plan to use combs, keep in mind not to take too much at any given time, especially if they are already stressed during the season. Wax takes a lot more work and resources to make compared to honey. A quick search says it takes 6-8 pounds of honey for each pound of wax, although wax is lighter in volume and is only used to form walls, so you might can get away with taking a frame or two if they have honey reserved.

    • @NSA-admin
      @NSA-admin Год назад +4

      ​@@foolishlyfoolhardy6004it looks like it has the entire hive ground up in it minus most of the bees lol.

  • @michalwoj9115
    @michalwoj9115 Год назад +2826

    Even if honey had been sitting on your shelf for 2,000 years, that honey would still be as good as the day you opened it

    • @blueferal8626
      @blueferal8626 Год назад +53

      Good I'll buy a bunch in bulk and wait 40000 years before consuming it 🦖

    • @curtism-w6b
      @curtism-w6b Год назад +30

      And then you die from botulism poisoning.

    • @markusbonnet439
      @markusbonnet439 Год назад +9

      They lose aroma and flavor over time no matter how you store it

    • @lewiswood1693
      @lewiswood1693 Год назад +17

      It depends on the type of honey.
      If the honey has a higher water content it can and will go rotten.

    • @Kaifunsiu
      @Kaifunsiu Год назад

      @@blueferal8626Sell it for good money💰💰

  • @taniatanner7483
    @taniatanner7483 21 час назад +1

    Another Factor reason why is more crystallized and solid it's because of the polarization where the bees are collecting their nectar depend on the geographic land and the type of flowers.

  • @mushroomy9899
    @mushroomy9899 Год назад +10208

    honey, honey doesn’t expire.

    • @Frostyy_y14
      @Frostyy_y14 Год назад +107

      best comment

    • @WallaceHumperdink
      @WallaceHumperdink Год назад +130

      Want my bottle that smells like old socks? Lol

    • @DentSideDee71
      @DentSideDee71 Год назад +33

      @@WallaceHumperdinka little goes a long ways

    • @Betterthenyou375
      @Betterthenyou375 Год назад +151

      Honey, honey changes overtime and eventually will change flavor and texture(like crystallizing)

    • @DentSideDee71
      @DentSideDee71 Год назад +97

      @@Betterthenyou375 that’s real honey lmao if you’ve ever gotten fresh or local 🍯 and let it sit and never use it it will turn dark shades of brown and be more crystallized

  • @Rose-yx6jq
    @Rose-yx6jq 7 месяцев назад +941

    "extend its shelf life"
    Like that's actually necessary.

    • @patrichbrandt
      @patrichbrandt 6 месяцев назад

      Yeah lol, there's so much sugar in honey that it practically cant expire and bacteria can't live in it

    • @jordandavis4318
      @jordandavis4318 6 месяцев назад +7

      😂😂😂 same thing i was thinking

    • @shieldwolf65
      @shieldwolf65 6 месяцев назад +7

      Yep natural Honey is the Bee's Knees, The Ant's Pants & the Mutt's nutts. 😊

    • @user-jy2ci5ox9v
      @user-jy2ci5ox9v 5 месяцев назад

      He’s an idiot RUclipsr. What does he know?

    • @farmbear1231
      @farmbear1231 4 месяца назад +2

      ​@@shieldwolf65mutts nuts got me lol

  • @tmadlegionsoul3255
    @tmadlegionsoul3255 8 месяцев назад +989

    "Extends shelf life" bro, honey is the only food that NEVER goes bad

    • @Josecapascy
      @Josecapascy 7 месяцев назад

      Water and Salt. Honey will eventually in millions of years break down and dissapear. Salt and Water have been on the Planet for over 4 Billion years.

    • @itmelittlepea8012
      @itmelittlepea8012 6 месяцев назад +9

      it can crystallize

    • @tmadlegionsoul3255
      @tmadlegionsoul3255 6 месяцев назад +91

      @@itmelittlepea8012 warm it and it turns back into liquid. Its still not spoiled. Honey has been found in Egyptian tombs still good.

    • @shaiii-chan
      @shaiii-chan 6 месяцев назад +12

      ​@@itmelittlepea8012Without spoiling.

    • @Dctctx
      @Dctctx 6 месяцев назад +45

      @@itmelittlepea8012crystallization doesn’t mean it’s gone bad

  • @The_Flynn_Files
    @The_Flynn_Files Месяц назад +1

    The way "liquify" is said tickles my brain

  • @theruintheruin337
    @theruintheruin337 Год назад +764

    Just a correction from a beekeeper, It's not cloudy, it's crystalised, where the sugar will turn into small crystals in colder temperatures. Depending on how much you strain it, depends on how many crystals it has, and how easy it will crystalise. Pasteurised honey is often strained and heated which removes natural enzymes as you said, but also stops crystallisation for a very long duration of time.

    • @adrianen4644
      @adrianen4644 Год назад +19

      I remember being so confused about this as a kid! Raw crystallized honey was one of my favorite flavors so I was annoyed when I tried pasteurized honey and it didn’t taste the same.

    • @ItsAsparageese
      @ItsAsparageese Год назад +8

      "Cloudy" is still a perfectly legitimate descriptor of the appearance. You're right about _why_ it appears cloudy, of course, and it's useful illumination! But it _is_ cloudy.

    • @Kingbudman
      @Kingbudman Год назад +4

      @@ItsAsparageese As a BeeK myself raw honey is not cloudy at all. I have honey that has been sitting in my cabinet for 2 years now and is still as clear as the day it was bottled. Like OP said when honey stays around 50 degrees F it will crystalize. Also what the video said about the color of honey is BS, that comes from what nectar was collected. I have (what is my best guess) clover honey and is is a much lighter color than the pasteurized honey in this video.

    • @ItsAsparageese
      @ItsAsparageese Год назад +2

      @@Kingbudman Again, "cloudy" is used here as just a visually descriptive term. Sure, not all raw honey shows the crystallization, but when it does -- and some of it does -- it is still accurate to describe it as "cloudy" in purely the sense of how it appears to an onlooker. It doesn't imply impurity or contamination or anything, it's literally just a descriptor of something having a little more opacity to its appearance

    • @moistbread9363
      @moistbread9363 Год назад +1

      So serious question, why does my honey turn into crystals and dry like when i dont even touch it and it sits in my cabinet because thats been happening a lot lately and i dont know what to do to keep honey around without spending a crap ton of money to prevent it from happening with a 50/50 percent chance of actually working

  • @daltonrenick5184
    @daltonrenick5184 Год назад +618

    Honey is one of those things you shouldn't cheap out on but you also shouldn't go for the most expensive option thinking it's the best.

    • @mouatazx
      @mouatazx Год назад +5

      Not reaally , i get 2 pounds for 15 bucks in morocco , its natural , cuz i get it straight from the farmer , price difference can be from what bees eats , like some types of flower that bees eats from can make the honey more expencive , like lavender honey , i already got it for like 45 bucks 2 pounds , its because of it uses , i used to add 1 spoon of it with hot water then drink it

    • @mouatazx
      @mouatazx Год назад

      Sugar natural honey , is honey made by bees that had eaten sugar , its as beneficial as other types of honey , but its cheaper , it can go for around 7bucks 2 pounds

    • @moonorchid9242
      @moonorchid9242 Год назад +2

      @@mouatazxorange blossom honey is one of my favs. Lavender honey is also sooooo good 😍
      I’d pay for that for sure

    • @StreakyBaconMan
      @StreakyBaconMan Год назад +3

      There is almost no reason to not cheap out on honey anymore - there used to be when there was a bunch of fake honey on the shelves, but they seemed to have addressed that issue and now if it says honey it's actually real honey. Not buying the cheapest honey (with the exception of special types of honey you may want for their unique flavour) is like not buying the cheapest bag of sugar. It's sugar - it doesn't matter which brand is selling it or how much they charge, it's the same thing in different packages.

    • @Fitzroyfallz
      @Fitzroyfallz Год назад +2

      Leatherwood is a beautiful dark honey. It’s only made in Tasmania in Australia, but luckily I live there so it’s not so hard to get my hands on it!

  • @sunnydupree
    @sunnydupree Год назад +1838

    Honey never spoils it doesn't need to be pasturized.. it lasts forever

    • @d_the_great
      @d_the_great Год назад +60

      It's for taste, it does need to be pasteurized to make it the way most people eat it

    • @twainrocks4771
      @twainrocks4771 Год назад +32

      Honey needs to be pasteurised.
      Unpasteurised honey will definitely spoil but pasteurised honey doesn't spoil.

    • @Tellysayhi
      @Tellysayhi Год назад +67

      counterpoint: botulism

    • @SergyMilitaryRankings
      @SergyMilitaryRankings Год назад +3

      Nothing lasts forever

    • @cumminglikeahorse
      @cumminglikeahorse Год назад +6

      @@SergyMilitaryRankings Oingo Boingo reference

  • @jadziadax5365
    @jadziadax5365 6 месяцев назад +2

    No confusion here, I only purchase the real Sourwood Honey with the comb inside.
    Pasteurized honey is usually from Clover and tastes good but different than Sourwood which has a richer flavor to it.

  • @splishsplash2031
    @splishsplash2031 Год назад +1328

    you’re the reason there is confusion about honey.

    • @Chosenonesphere
      @Chosenonesphere 10 месяцев назад +18

      😂

    • @triskits_mmm
      @triskits_mmm 10 месяцев назад +31

      Yes 100% 😂😂 great comment.
      The real truth. They're all basically the same one just costs 5x more than the other
      EDIT: Alright yeah the cheap honey and bear bottle honey is different.

    • @eduardochavacano
      @eduardochavacano 9 месяцев назад +1

      😂

    • @Silverhydra33
      @Silverhydra33 9 месяцев назад +56

      ​@@triskits_mmmhow are they the same? There is a massive difference between honey straight from the hive with the beneficial enzymes and nutrients vs honey that was heated to the point where it is just pure sugar with 0 beneficial nutritional value

    • @crispyapple3053
      @crispyapple3053 9 месяцев назад +11

      ​@@Silverhydra33and at my local grocery the local raw honey is actually priced lower than most of the pasteurized brands. There's a lot of smaller producers too and the farmgate price is competitive with the grocery.

  • @crelos3549
    @crelos3549 Год назад +282

    Extends it's shelf life from infinity to infinity times 2

  • @VladtheInhaler-mv6yo
    @VladtheInhaler-mv6yo 9 месяцев назад +2198

    Put it in hot water to liquefy it. Zapping it in the microwave also kills the beneficial enzymes. It's basically flash-pasteurization

    • @danielfoster9782
      @danielfoster9782 8 месяцев назад +197

      No, this is not correct, a sufficient amount of heat into the honey will inactivate enzymes. it does not matter if you use a microwave or a hot water bath.

    • @jonathandpg6115
      @jonathandpg6115 8 месяцев назад

      God people have to stop with the cult like mentality. The damage from heat will not really impact the overall quality

    • @Ayudado
      @Ayudado 8 месяцев назад +50

      The corrector being corrected. Love to see that

    • @Dragonalynn
      @Dragonalynn 8 месяцев назад +66

      @@danielfoster9782It does matter as microwaving changes foods at the molecular level making it less beneficial for good health.

    • @scottycatman
      @scottycatman 8 месяцев назад +95

      ​@@Dragonalynnhow does heat not change it at the molecular level?

  • @SpiderxPunk
    @SpiderxPunk 4 месяца назад +1

    I was going to point out honey doesn't really have a shelf life, it's essentially self immortal.
    But a ton of people beat me to it, so props to them

  • @ThatOneJaydn
    @ThatOneJaydn Год назад +2021

    As a beekeeper…DO NOT MICROWAVE HONEY

    • @FajrLebanon
      @FajrLebanon 10 месяцев назад +124

      Underrated comment on this vid

    • @aliffmikhail146
      @aliffmikhail146 10 месяцев назад +102

      i think he shouldnt even use a metal spoon too

    • @aloka9784
      @aloka9784 10 месяцев назад +261

      so i can microwave it when I'm not beekeeper ?

    • @ThatOneJaydn
      @ThatOneJaydn 10 месяцев назад +445

      @@aloka9784 microwaving it gets rid of a bunch of natural nutrients that are in the honey and also taints the flavor a tad but if you just put the bottle in boiling water and heat it that way nothing in the honey is removed and you’ll end up having a better product in the end

    • @aloka9784
      @aloka9784 10 месяцев назад +36

      @@ThatOneJaydn i was joking. your sentence provoked me. ofc you are right

  • @anakelly76512
    @anakelly76512 Год назад +203

    I had 5 lbs. of honey. The whole thing crystallized.
    I just dug out what I needed and melted it.
    Honey has a shelf life of eternity it seems.
    They found a jar of 3,000 year old honey that was still good.

    • @ohifonlyx33
      @ohifonlyx33 Год назад +6

      Same! We have a big "honey pot" in our basement. That we 7se to refil a squeeze bottle.

  • @Zatiels
    @Zatiels Год назад +71

    Honey does NOT expire, but the container might, so be careful.

    • @weiwu1442
      @weiwu1442 Год назад +10

      thats why glass jars are king, no plastic leeching

    • @ChocolateMilkyYummy
      @ChocolateMilkyYummy Год назад +1

      especially if you touch the honey in the jar with your finger like he did in the video lol

  • @pepegarcia4668
    @pepegarcia4668 4 месяца назад +34

    I've tried raw honey, it has a weird texture if not liquified but still tastes better than normal honey

    • @helgenlane
      @helgenlane Месяц назад +9

      Raw honey is normal honey. Refined honey is the weird one

    • @rachel3682
      @rachel3682 Месяц назад +3

      Raw honey is original honey 😂. Wtf

    • @NitroDS
      @NitroDS Месяц назад +2

      people who say raw honey instead of honey also think steak can only be eaten in well done

    • @moteroargentino7944
      @moteroargentino7944 Месяц назад +2

      The thing is that raw honey is like wine. There are tons of variations. Generally they all taste "like honey", but there are clearly different textures and flavors depending on where it comes from.

    • @mattia_carciola
      @mattia_carciola День назад

      ​@@helgenlane Bro for real! Whenever I hear Americans mentioning raw honey like it's something exotic and weird I'm always amused

  • @Pwanchi
    @Pwanchi Год назад +327

    Extend shelf life? Someone tell him honey doesn't go bad.

    • @tylerwestman5258
      @tylerwestman5258 Год назад +7

      And is that only food resistant to radiation

    • @N08R76H
      @N08R76H Год назад +5

      Shelf life and expiration aren’t the same. Raw honey will crystallize before pasteurized honey.

    • @infinite5g486
      @infinite5g486 Год назад

      ​@@tylerwestman5258WAIT FOR REAL

    • @NitrEmo
      @NitrEmo Год назад +11

      ​​@@N08R76HHey. Ppst. Little secret. Crystallised honey is still honey. It's safe to eat as long as you don't mix it with tar or something.

    • @N08R76H
      @N08R76H Год назад +2

      @@NitrEmo yes I know, I heat up my crystallized honey in order to eat it.

  • @seanmorgan2356
    @seanmorgan2356 9 месяцев назад +432

    3,000 year old Egyptian honey has entered chat.

    • @hm-ui9qq
      @hm-ui9qq 7 месяцев назад +4

      It was a bathtub

  • @mihaifloares2503
    @mihaifloares2503 6 месяцев назад +142

    "Raw" honey can be even more fluid and runny and crystal clear than "pasteurised honey". My grandpa was a hobbist beekeeper and we always had fresh honey. The honey made from the flowers of a tree called "black locust tree" known as pseudoacacia is always almost transparent, runny and the most amazing honey I ve had.

    • @viodido
      @viodido 4 месяца назад +5

      This video is for people who think the earth is flat

    • @cyruskhalvati
      @cyruskhalvati 4 месяца назад +3

      The raw honey industry adds pollen into their products to get that opaque yellow color people associate with it today.
      In reality, as you mentioned, raw honey is generally much more clear, and has much less pollen in it.
      Then again, some flowering plants are extremely pollen heavy so it is also possible to naturally have that opaque white honey.

    • @mihaifloares2503
      @mihaifloares2503 4 месяца назад

      @@cyruskhalvati Exactly, when it comes to homemade honey, I would say that bee's source plants influence the most, the final product. As I said, black locust pseudoacacia white flowes give a honey, like a transparent glucose syrup that everyone loves where I live. While sunflower honey is yellow and opaque, and oily. It is good, but cheaper, where I live

  • @kw-wg5tl
    @kw-wg5tl 6 месяцев назад +2

    How can you extend shelf life pass forever? Honey never goes bad. Real honey, that is.

  • @mikeprice3174
    @mikeprice3174 Год назад +2557

    Microwaving raw honey is about the worst possible thing you can do to it. If you need to warm it up, use a warm water bath (but make sure no water gets into the honey). Also, honey doesn't go bad if stored away from moisture. They have found edible honey that's several thousands of years old.

    • @xtragedgnolf
      @xtragedgnolf Год назад +171

      Idk man... poisoning it or blowing it up with explosives miiight be worse

    • @sleazypolar
      @sleazypolar Год назад +48

      what do you imagine the difference is between warm water and microwave?

    • @Mike-nq7fn
      @Mike-nq7fn Год назад +56

      Microwave kills all living things in the honey, duh

    • @Paranoidpedantic
      @Paranoidpedantic Год назад +69

      Im gonna deep fry my honey now that i know its safer than microwaving

    • @Nakkiteline
      @Nakkiteline Год назад +48

      and why do you think it kills everything in it? all microwave does, is aggrivate the water molecules making them vibrate rapidly, thus generating heat. microwaves themselves aren't dangerous, it's just about the frequency. there's no dangerous radiation. so why do you think it kills everything in it?

  • @pablozurita2996
    @pablozurita2996 Год назад +888

    Bro, honey never goes bad, not even for thousands of years

    • @ace3183
      @ace3183 Год назад +46

      The reason why honey doesn't go bad is it because its so saturated with sugar and stuff that its moisture level is so low, disabling bacteria to grow

    • @ninetailedfoxunit
      @ninetailedfoxunit Год назад +14

      if you dont store it properly it actually can

    • @deamigo9286
      @deamigo9286 Год назад +3

      Unless u buy water infused honey

  • @dantiel92
    @dantiel92 Год назад +683

    Pro tip. Honey never ever goes bad. It never spoilds

    • @mafi000
      @mafi000 Год назад +6

      this is not even a tip...

    • @wdadwdwdwadw8604
      @wdadwdwdwadw8604 Год назад

      it does only if you inject it with bacteria that can survive in it which is super super super rare.
      so yea 99.99% of honey does not expire

    • @elizlikethequeen
      @elizlikethequeen Год назад +5

      ​@@mafi000actually, it's JUST the tip.

    • @MachiriReviews
      @MachiriReviews Год назад +13

      As long as it’s never contaminated. You can still get botulism from honey.

    • @Logan_sb
      @Logan_sb Год назад +5

      John 3:16
      “For God so loved the world, that he gave his only Son, that whoever believes in him should not perish but have eternal life.”

  • @zzzlulzzz5080
    @zzzlulzzz5080 Год назад +316

    I lost it when he mentioned EXTEND SHELF LIFE, honey literally stays like for a Century 😂

    • @topofthemorning6832
      @topofthemorning6832 Год назад +6

      You must absolutely lose it whenever you see water bottles with expiration dates aswell then right.
      No one wants to buy honey that's already crystallised. And it comes inside of a plastic tube that slowly breaks down.
      Not sure why it's so hard to understand it has a shelf life for paying customers.

    • @thechosenone9769
      @thechosenone9769 Год назад +5

      It's more than a century. Several Millenia is more like it and it still hadn't gone bad.

    • @thechosenone9769
      @thechosenone9769 Год назад +5

      ​​@@topofthemorning6832who checks expiration dates on water bottles. I didn't even know they had those. It must be the "water" with a whole ingredients list.
      Also shelf life refers to how long it's good for. And if you lower the price People absolutely will buy crystallized honey. It's basically the same thing as any other honey you just have to work a tiny bit for it, hence the lower price. And some honey comes in glass jars so when talking about how long a product can last it only makes sense to include the packaging if it is always part of the product.

    • @monchiexthemonkey6068
      @monchiexthemonkey6068 Год назад +6

      ​@@topofthemorning6832this dosen't apply to glass or metal so it dosen't really matter for people.that get real honey and not walmart honey

    • @topofthemorning6832
      @topofthemorning6832 Год назад

      @@monchiexthemonkey6068 it applies because consumers don't want to buy honey that's already cristilized.
      Same reason why so much fruit gets wasted that doesn't appear perfect

  • @nikzain9378
    @nikzain9378 Год назад +192

    If you have a honey that goes bad, it means you were ripped off

    • @ragnkja
      @ragnkja Год назад +5

      Yup, it means that the water content was too high.

    • @Lattazz
      @Lattazz 11 месяцев назад +5

      most likely has syrup mixed in like most brands

    • @oakstrong1
      @oakstrong1 10 месяцев назад +3

      ​@@ragnkjaReal honey does not have a water content that would have any effect. If there's water, it's been added to make bigger profits.

    • @oakstrong1
      @oakstrong1 10 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@LattazzYou are quite right. It is difficult to detect fake honey even in laboratories these days.
      Producing honey commercially costs a lot of money, so you know that if if the honey is cheap, it has got a fair bit of syrup. "Organic" is not a guarantee of authenticity, unfortunately.
      Avoid honey from China and Vietnam and anything that says "multiple origin" and buy instead single origin honey that can be traced to the farm.

    • @ragnkja
      @ragnkja 10 месяцев назад

      @@oakstrong1
      Exactly. Pure honey should have a too low water content for anything to grow in it, so either it’s been kept in something that wasn’t airtight enough, or someone deliberately added water to increase the volume. Either way, someone’s been trying to increase their profits in some way.

  • @Someguy1357
    @Someguy1357 Год назад +109

    All honey is strained to remove wax, bees, etc. Raw honey likely has more pollen and wax in it. Usually bees store pollen, honey, or nectar separately. They eat pollen and turn nectar into honey via fermentation. So the think light brown stuff probably has a bunch of pollen and some wax in the mix.
    "Natural" honey looks very similar to the standard honey you're used to.

    • @killer008r
      @killer008r Год назад

      All honey? I think you are greatly mistaken there because all honey is not strained.

    • @goodman854
      @goodman854 Год назад

      The difference is unpasteurized honey or pasteurized are both purified under a bunch of filters. Raw honey is just strained which is different, for some reason.

    • @killer008r
      @killer008r Год назад

      @@goodman854 .... No, raw honey is not purified, raw honey is raw. There's no reason to purify it.

    • @oakstrong1
      @oakstrong1 10 месяцев назад

      ​@@killer008rReally? You have bought honey with dead bees and other debris in it?

    • @oakstrong1
      @oakstrong1 10 месяцев назад

      ​@@killer008rI think you misunderstood what he meant about purifying. I understand that the honey is filtered to remove any unwanted debris. This IS done with colanders and (cheese) cloths just like when you want to make clear jelly.

  • @erinjadesworld6638
    @erinjadesworld6638 Месяц назад

    Thank you for that, I always thought raw honey was bougee, you were right Dr. Mike Israetel!

  • @CDG639
    @CDG639 6 месяцев назад +973

    Bro just recommended microwaving raw honey😂

    • @boatoflol
      @boatoflol 6 месяцев назад +149

      Absolute hack, "pasturize" it yourself

    • @Goshawk9
      @Goshawk9 6 месяцев назад +259

      He just " degraded the natural enzymes and reduced the level of antioxidants"

    • @Goshawk9
      @Goshawk9 6 месяцев назад +84

      What he should have done, is gave it a water bath

    • @adk417
      @adk417 6 месяцев назад +75

      ​@@Goshawk9put it in a bowl of hot water, it will eventually become liquid.

    • @DeepRacer-zr4yp
      @DeepRacer-zr4yp 6 месяцев назад +3

      Lol

  • @alexorth8152
    @alexorth8152 6 месяцев назад +155

    I used be part of a group that would set up and take care of beehives in community gardens, and schools. Each one of our hives honey had a distinct flavor because we sold it raw. It’s crazy how much the flavor can change, we had one hive in a little orchard that made super sweet fruity honey. Another was in a community garden that grew a lot of herbs vegetables it’s honey had wonderful sweet herbal and earthy flavor. One of the favorites of the community was the hives we had in point defiance park their honey had a minty flavor to it.

    • @vaibhav24
      @vaibhav24 Месяц назад +1

      keep up the good work

    • @bivtheast
      @bivtheast 29 дней назад

      In Tacoma? Nice, I didn't know there were people doing that in the area. So cool

  • @AgentSapphire
    @AgentSapphire Год назад +75

    Okay, first of all, under no circumstances should you MICROWAVE raw honey. Not only do you kill a lot of the enzymes and stuff that are good for you but that superheating can do bad stuff to impurities in the honey causing them to pop or become way too hot compared to the honey (or glass) around it. I've never had a jar shatter or explode on me but I have had one jump and spray scalding honey all over my microwave. If you need to melt your honey take the jar and place it in a pot of water. Bring that water to just under a boil and wait. It takes longer but its safer.
    Edit: You CAN microwave pasteurized honey but it's still not recommended for the same reasons as above. It's significantly safer though. Additionally if your honey is in a plastic container and has turned to crystal, wait for it to harden completely and then slice open the container with a sharp, sterile knife or kitchen scissors. Put it in a glass or ceramic container or bowl and melt over the stove.
    "white" or "cloudy" honey is significantly more expensive but there was also a lot less work put into it. You're paying more money for the people who make it to do less work since they don't have to filter out the fine pollen. There are no significant health benefits to pollen so only buy it if you prefer the taste since in all other ways its exactly like standard raw honey.
    Edit: I forgot to include cloudy honey may also have some wax in it. The wax is safe to eat but that means they didn't even bother removing the honey from the wax. Again, unless you're specifically fond of the taste just get normal honey. You get more volume for less money.
    Additionally pasteurized honey does not have a longer shelf life than raw honey. As long as you don't introduce sugar eating bacteria or fungi honey stays good basically forever. Raw honey will crystalize faster due to impurities but if that happens see my above instructions for melting it.

    • @jeffreyweevers3919
      @jeffreyweevers3919 Год назад +5

      I was shocked when he put it in the microwave

    • @heavenlyebi
      @heavenlyebi Год назад +2

      Thank you for your service

    • @cremdilly7176
      @cremdilly7176 Год назад +2

      I'm realizing that the people who have time to make shorts like this probably shouldn't be giving advice to people. The people with real knowledge are too busy doing things to edit videos.

    • @AgentSapphire
      @AgentSapphire Год назад +2

      @@cremdilly7176 It feels that way, right? Not all videos are like that. There's a lot of great bee rescue and beekeeping vids on youtube. But those people probably have someone else doing editing for them.

    • @Walrus101
      @Walrus101 21 час назад

      ​@cremdilly7176 What are you talking about? This is a way to make money. He doesn't need to be a beekeeper by trade to create an informational video. And a beekeeper would be very valid in creating information for the public. Too busy doing things? What? Do beekeepers/people with knowledge on subjects do literally nothing but grind their work, learn some new stuff, sleep and repeat? Huh? They can't do extra work on the side, have a hobby, or share information to the public (something they are very well able to do)? All of those things are parts of/reasons for making videos about a subject. I listened to one of Sue Hubbel's audio books recently; should she not have written a book, teaching and inspiring other people about her work, because she's supposed to be too busy working on other things?

  • @vas7ilissi8
    @vas7ilissi8 19 дней назад

    There is a story in ancient greek history about the king Agisilaos II of Spartans. He died in the return of his army from Egypt in a campaign against the Mideans and Persians . They brought his body back in a coffin after covering him in oil and honey. He was protected of everything and returned to Sparta for his proper burial.

  • @zw2al
    @zw2al 6 месяцев назад +551

    As a non-american, I didn't even know there was a pasteurised honey

    • @esthermutharia6380
      @esthermutharia6380 6 месяцев назад +10

      We call it 'cooked honey'. Which makes it safer for wound care.

    • @VainakhQuranites
      @VainakhQuranites 4 месяца назад

      In America they industrialize everything, hence everything good is pasteurized and burned away

    • @lkhdmrtn
      @lkhdmrtn 4 месяца назад +64

      @@esthermutharia6380Honey is naturally antibacterial.
      That's because it has so much sugar in it.

    • @fortnitetrashcan8308
      @fortnitetrashcan8308 4 месяца назад +20

      there is pasteurized honey everywhere not just usa

    • @smelly1060
      @smelly1060 4 месяца назад

      Stop the fucking cap😂 unless you're from som rural village you are chatting shit

  • @jimsmisadventuresinbeekeeping
    @jimsmisadventuresinbeekeeping 8 месяцев назад +471

    If you buy your honey from a local beekeeper you're most likely guaranteed to get nothing but pure, raw honey. You're going to pay a premium for it up to $1.50 an ounce in some areas, but you're getting what you pay for. The alternative is store bought which sometimes has been altered with corn syrup, or comes from areas of concern when it comes to safe harvesting practices, and what may have been added to the honey before being bottled and labeled for sale.

    • @Jack-jq4if
      @Jack-jq4if 7 месяцев назад +11

      Funnily enough I have never eaten store bought honey or pasteurised honey. Grandpa has been a beekeeper ever since he retired as a teacher and the produce is in the homes of all my familiy members. Too bad I am highly allergic to bee-toxins so I can't take over ever from him. Also apparently here we call it soft honey for pasteurised honey.

    • @wisdomandlove1661
      @wisdomandlove1661 6 месяцев назад +2

      Yes, real raw honey can be expensive.

    • @sadedx
      @sadedx 6 месяцев назад +1

      @@Jack-jq4ifisn’t that ironic?

    • @MatteoFitness
      @MatteoFitness 6 месяцев назад +3

      Lol whatever bro nobody cares about harvesting practices for their honey and it will say on the jar of there is other stuff in it 😂. You’re def not getting shit for the premium.

    • @jimsmisadventuresinbeekeeping
      @jimsmisadventuresinbeekeeping 6 месяцев назад +7

      @@MatteoFitness I 've always sold my honey for $.100 an ounce, sonce covid the price in some areas has gone up to $1.50 an ouncem if someone didn't want to pay $1 an ounce they were always welcome to purchase elsewhere, I guess just like you would. Local honey is the best, I don't buy store bought honey because most of it is imported and you never know what has added to it, or any countriy's harvesting practices. I've been abeekeeper for 6 years so I'm not just someone talking to her myself talk, I do have some knowledge of bees and honey under my belt.

  • @christopherenders4280
    @christopherenders4280 10 месяцев назад +238

    "Heat can remove the enzymes, antioxidants, and flavor of your honey"
    "If your raw honey misbehaves, throw it in the microwave"

    • @PLF...
      @PLF... 7 месяцев назад +1

      Amount of heat is a significant detail you seem to have missed mate

    • @damonedrington3453
      @damonedrington3453 7 месяцев назад +2

      @@PLF...microwaves heat up food in the worst way possible for honey. Honey needs to be gently heated but microwaves, due to their nature of moving water molecules to heat food, inject said heat much more violently than a hot water bath would. All you need is a bowl that the jar is in, and some water that’s not even boiling (I use water that’s just forming bubbles on the bottom) and stir the honey after you pour the water. It takes 2 minutes more and is so worth it

    • @SilentJoNn
      @SilentJoNn 7 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@PLF... have you never used a microwave before? or did you not think for even a single second before you wrote this comment? lmao

  • @Sonjaczek
    @Sonjaczek 29 дней назад

    I grew up in Poland in the 90s - raw honey is all I ever knew 😂

  • @oliverplagata2736
    @oliverplagata2736 Год назад +13

    My grandpa who is a beekeeper says that you shouldn't microwave/heat up honey since it destroy some of the natural flavor compounds found in raw honey.

    • @FlaccidPlatypus
      @FlaccidPlatypus Год назад +1

      Yeah I cringed when he put the whole jar in the microwave. I wouldn’t complain if he scooped a bit out into a different container.

  • @Diverted-
    @Diverted- Год назад +35

    Today's fact: honey is immortal.

    • @alexanderzore42
      @alexanderzore42 6 месяцев назад

      According to all known laws of aviation, there is no way that a bee should be able to fly. Its wings are too small to get its fat little body off the ground. The bee, of course, flies anyways. Because bees don’t care what humans think is impossible.

  • @Sara-mr1hs
    @Sara-mr1hs 8 месяцев назад +80

    Never heard about raw honey... In Sweden, that is what the ordinary honey looks like!!
    (As oppose to "liquid honey", that has only been around a couple of years...)

    • @atriyakoller136
      @atriyakoller136 8 месяцев назад +14

      As someone whose dad has picked up beekeeping and who gets access to the highest quality honey available, I can safely say that a lot of fresh honey is liquid. It solidifies over time, with this consistency of "raw honey" being something I'd have after 2 years. If the honey I get actually lasted that long haha
      This year's honey is liquid unless it's from some special herbs. Depends on many factors but liquid honey also doesn't have to be pasteurised. Who the hell even thought of pasteurization when it comes to honey anyway?

    • @Sara-mr1hs
      @Sara-mr1hs 8 месяцев назад

      @@atriyakoller136 Interesting!!

    • @PLF...
      @PLF... 7 месяцев назад +1

      Sara you know thats not true in any way. Youve always been able to get honeys that are liquid (e.g. from acacia) in all of Scandinavia

    • @Sara-mr1hs
      @Sara-mr1hs 7 месяцев назад

      @@PLF...No, I didn't know about that? It might have been available if you were looking for it. But I never saw it til I was grown up. As a child, I always wondered how come the honey that Winnie the pooh ate was so liquid. And still today, the label on the non liquid honey says only "Honey", while the other type says "liquid honey", as being different from ordinary, non liquid honey. The non liquid form is the traditional, swedish standard honey, and the only one I knew growing up.

    • @SilentJoNn
      @SilentJoNn 6 месяцев назад

      @@PLF... damn you are really just talking out of your ass arent you? good luck with that.

  • @phungphan2245
    @phungphan2245 4 месяца назад

    Him: heat can break down enzymes and healthy stuff
    Also him: zaps it in the microwave

  • @jimihenrik11
    @jimihenrik11 Год назад +41

    A beekeper once explained the difference to me, but he used the words lliving honey and dead honey. He basically said that living honey is much better for any form of raw consumption (like spreading on your bread), since it tastes better and is much healthier. But He recommended dead honey for everything that heats the honey, like cooking, honeywine making, putting it into tea etc.

  • @DragonMan5643
    @DragonMan5643 Год назад +49

    Absolutely love the raw honey I get from some local beekeepers. Tastes absolutely different from anything else I get at the store.

  • @timmyrap1o1
    @timmyrap1o1 Год назад +229

    Extends its shelf life honey can't expire

    • @WallaceHumperdink
      @WallaceHumperdink Год назад +1

      I bet to differ. You want my address and come smell this bottle of dandelion honey from Calgary that went from intense to terrible dirty sick flavour in a few weeks? 🤷🏼😆

    • @brandaanvandebotermet4579
      @brandaanvandebotermet4579 Год назад +19

      @@WallaceHumperdink then what you bought was not honey but sugar water.

    • @Random_dreadnought
      @Random_dreadnought Год назад +10

      ​@@WallaceHumperdinkeither you did not buy real honey or you did not preserve it right and kept it in humidity honey lasts forever and only a bit flavor fades but thats it. People found a roman honey jar (roman timing) that was already 1000 years old and it still tasted pretty good but funky due to the fact that bees pollinated different flowers thus different flavor.

    • @DumplingDoodle
      @DumplingDoodle Год назад +7

      @@WallaceHumperdink what you have either isn't honey, or it was stored very poorly and moisture got in.

    • @john_titor1
      @john_titor1 Год назад +1

      ​@@Random_dreadnought If you have to store it "right" to prevent it from spoiling, it spoils. Nothing would spoil if you kept it in a perfectly sterile environment.

  • @NoctaveGrind
    @NoctaveGrind Месяц назад

    I love when honey is chunky, it's like candy i love sometime to go take a chunk on a spoon then eat it little by little will chilling outside just like a kid

  • @certz320
    @certz320 Год назад +1026

    My family has had bees for years and I’ve always helped on harvest day. Not once have I seen anything remotely close to that “raw” honey. The honey inside the capped comb is just like you would imagine, liquid golden honey. I’m thinking they are just melting the wax/comb with the honey and packaging it as something special when in reality it’s not at all. Zero bee honey looks like that “raw” stuff

    • @tunafish0002
      @tunafish0002 Год назад +93

      Well the honey solidifies after a while or more specifically crystallizes no matter how organic and raw it won’t look the same as freshly harvested a couple days after in the store or at home.

    • @AT-gu8by
      @AT-gu8by Год назад +126

      If you have bees then you should know what crystallization looks like.

    • @papakazas
      @papakazas Год назад +39

      I love honey! It comes in many colours, consistency and types (from trees it's darker and somehow bitter, from bushes it has an intense aroma, from flowers it's lighter and sweeter) and when unprocessed, it crystalizes. Temperature is also an important factor on this one.
      Companies heat it up because it looks better for consumers (because it doesn't crystalize on the shelve after processing) and because they mix it with sugar and corn syrup. Pure liquid honey leaves an "infinite" really thin string when test-pouring it from a spoon, liquid honey that has been messed up with "drops" when the string gets thinner..
      When trying to liquify crystalized honey, i think the rule is that it should never exceed your body temperature. There are some big electric pots where you can set the water temperature when placing your jars there for approximately a day. Please never microwave it ;-)

    • @Jeff-mn1uq
      @Jeff-mn1uq Год назад

      ​@@tunafish0002it takes a very long time for it to crystallize and it doesn't look anything like that. This "raw honey" is a product for city people. Whatever the fuck it is its not natural like thar from the hive.

    • @jijogorgeraj
      @jijogorgeraj Год назад +26

      Never come across raw honey as a paste or chunks. Have grown over 20 types of bees.

  • @pit8274
    @pit8274 Год назад +48

    i just realized I've never had pasteurized honey, my family always just called raw honey "honey"

    • @DumplingDoodle
      @DumplingDoodle Год назад

      jealous. i'd sometimes get it as a treat when i was a kid lol. loved that stuff

    • @KARMAZYNA
      @KARMAZYNA Год назад +4

      I've had pasteurised once or twice, and let me tell you, it was not good. It had the texture close to corn syrup, not pleasant at all.

  • @777repentnow
    @777repentnow 6 месяцев назад +31

    lol i had raw honey straight out of the hive in Africa… literally had bees still in it, looked like regular liquid honey, it was almost clear because of the local flowers in the bush there.

    • @stooroosk
      @stooroosk 2 месяца назад

      With bees in it? 🤮🤮🤮

    • @777repentnow
      @777repentnow 2 месяца назад

      @@stooroosk yes because they hadn’t even cleaned it out yet!! I still have the video haha! They clean it out, but i just happened to catch them with a bunch of it before it got separated from the comb and cleaned !

    • @straw1berry11
      @straw1berry11 2 месяца назад +4

      @@stooroosk All honey has bees in it at first. They just clean it out before placing it on the shelf. If it disgusts you so much, you should probably just not eat honey at all.

  • @katie5351
    @katie5351 Месяц назад

    Just an FYI for people that have never seen raw honey before other than this video, not all raw honey looks like that, I have had some that are just as smooth as pasteurized honey

  • @coenvdb6032
    @coenvdb6032 Год назад +609

    Dont use metal utensils for honey. Honey is very acidic, putting metal in it will alter the taste.

    • @savagesarethebest7251
      @savagesarethebest7251 Год назад +96

      Metals actually affect the taste of most things, there is a extreme difference between copper, aluminum, steel, silver and gold. I think that I listed them correctly in order of most impact to the least. Gold shouldn't really affect most things, not even strong basic or acidic unless there somehow is a charge difference (could probably happen if you have amalgam denture fillings).
      Woods and plastic can really affect the taste, but wood doesn't taste bad at least :)

    • @savagesarethebest7251
      @savagesarethebest7251 Год назад +1

      Also don't eat acidic things with copper, aluminum or God forbid Pewter! It leaches out the Metals into the food and it is not good for you.
      Pewter is probably the reason why people thought that tomatoes were toxic, they are acidic and dissolves the lead out of the cutlery, and lead is very toxic. How nice that petrol engines spew out that too and not only carbon dioxide... 🙄

    • @coenvdb6032
      @coenvdb6032 Год назад +11

      @@savagesarethebest7251 Interesting, did not know the extent of it.

    • @unbreakablemindset7695
      @unbreakablemindset7695 Год назад +14

      More than the flavor, the thing is it can destroy beneficial enzymes because of the metal ions mixing with the honey.

    • @michaelv1557
      @michaelv1557 Год назад +25

      Just about every honey extractor and decapping apparatus is made of stainless steel.

  • @blackdagger7332
    @blackdagger7332 Год назад +6

    Do not eat honey off shelves if you dont trust it or know it. America has laws that permit companies to add a high volume of stuff that isn't honey into their honey bottles, and then label it as fully real honey.

  • @buyerenogurlfwendo2106
    @buyerenogurlfwendo2106 Год назад +89

    I’d definitely use a warm water bath over a microwave for raw honey. And keep the water below boiling.

    • @pho_is_not_interesting
      @pho_is_not_interesting Год назад

      Why

    • @awjd123
      @awjd123 Год назад +2

      Bro saw that comment and decided to copy it 😂

    • @yasvault
      @yasvault Год назад

      Copied comment

    • @celebezz
      @celebezz 4 дня назад

      Or just throw the honey in the trash where it belongs

  • @MobyWanKenobi
    @MobyWanKenobi 3 месяца назад

    Raw honey is when you hold a spoon under the spout of the honeycomb centrifuge and have to pick out dead bees once in a while

  • @TrevTheMan00
    @TrevTheMan00 Год назад +46

    I only get my honey from the local bee man since it helps in the spring with allergies

    • @onlyyours725
      @onlyyours725 Год назад +6

      Bam! This is the correct answer. You, my friend, are on the right track. Don't bee fooled. (Lol- bee)

    • @Chris_winthers
      @Chris_winthers Год назад

      It *might* help prevent allergies in babies. Are you a baby with the potential to get allergies? If not, then don't pretend like it has an effect

    • @wisefries4205
      @wisefries4205 Год назад +10

      @@Chris_winthers it's known (or rumored?) to help with allergies in all people. Children under a year old aren't advised to have honey because honey can have the bacteria that causes botulism.

    • @monchiexthemonkey6068
      @monchiexthemonkey6068 Год назад +5

      ​@@Chris_winthershow do you get such wrong info?

    • @yosoye578
      @yosoye578 Год назад

      ​@@Chris_winthers Beekeeper here. I've had dozens of people tell me they stopped taking their allergy pill within a few weeks/ month of eating my raw honey. Now, I've never done a control group on any population or used any placebos or what-not, but I know I've had several people with allergies ranging from annoying to severe that claimed that local raw honey helped them.

  • @CloudColumncat
    @CloudColumncat Год назад +50

    Saying that honey has an expiration date means that it is an imitation with something else added to the person's honey.
    In other words, if you ask and find out where the person bought the honey, you don't have to buy it there. Great tip!

    • @ragnkja
      @ragnkja 11 месяцев назад

      It could also be the expiration date of the container it’s in.

  • @Stimzz
    @Stimzz Год назад +12

    That isn't raw honey. Even honey straight from the honeycomb is clear. Idk what the fuck that shit is.

    • @AT-gu8by
      @AT-gu8by Год назад +2

      Honey crystallizes over time, you can either buy clear or crystallized.🙄

    • @Jeff-mn1uq
      @Jeff-mn1uq Год назад +8

      Thats not what crystallized honey looks like. And takes a long time for a whole jar to look like that. A very long time. And there would still be liquid honey on bottom. This "raw honey" bs is some kind of product. Every year i watch my grandpa extract his honey its completely normal like honey should be and his leftover honey from the year before is usually 100 percent liquid still.

    • @Jeff-mn1uq
      @Jeff-mn1uq Год назад +1

      Exactly. I think some dirty bastards are melting the fucking bees wax into the honey!

    • @AT-gu8by
      @AT-gu8by Год назад

      @@Jeff-mn1uq ruclips.net/video/zKxalEeSZ2o/видео.html

    • @DenSvartaStjarnan
      @DenSvartaStjarnan Год назад +3

      That's what Swedish honey looks like. Cloudy. Tastes much better than the clear honey I've tasted, in my opinion.

  • @TheHumanSpirit
    @TheHumanSpirit 5 месяцев назад +2

    I do NOT use the microwave for anything. It's my understanding that microwaves destroy the nutrients within food. Thanks for this video. I've wondered about the differences.

    • @Sidharth_V_Jain
      @Sidharth_V_Jain Месяц назад +1

      That's not true at all, microwaves don't destroy nutrients any more than other cooking methods do. Though proteins and so on can obviously break down over extended periods of heating, there is absolutely nothing wrong with zapping honey for a few seconds like in the video.

  • @guillaumep.7206
    @guillaumep.7206 Год назад +11

    Best to make crystalized honey back to liquid is to put the jar is warm water and stir until the ideal consistency is reached.

  • @Jeff-mn1uq
    @Jeff-mn1uq Год назад +59

    I've watched my grandpa keep bees and extract honey my entire life helping extract several times and I've never seen anything remotely close to this "raw honey". I think its just a processed product for city people. Omg its organic tske my money. Straight from the comb honey looks exactly like the store bought honey except some solid bits that need to be filtered. And no before someone says its normal honey its just crystallized no. It wouldn't be smooth like that. Its crunchy. And it takes a long time to get hard if the jar is sealed properly. My grandpa keeps gallons and gallos of honey in the basement and often times it takes over a year for the honey to harden. Btw its better to boil some water and take it off the stove then put the honey jar in the water and melt it that way.

    • @depressionbomb
      @depressionbomb Год назад +7

      It's creamed honey, basically intentionally crystallising it in a controlled way to preserve most of the texture and keep it from turning into rock candy. It's definitely not raw honey but it can still be organic

    • @raerohan4241
      @raerohan4241 Год назад +9

      ​@@depressionbomb The issue is that people look at this and assume this is what "real" honey looks like, when in fact raw honey can be fully liquid when fresh, and pasteurised honey can have wax re-introduced and creamed and it will look exactly like this.

  • @gaijininja
    @gaijininja Год назад +184

    Raw honey, if extracted properly, will last thousands of years. They find perfectly edible honey occasionally in archaeological digs. Pasteurised honey does have a shelf life. If you are lucky, it will candy as it approaches the shelf life, which will stabilise it, meaning you can heat it up to liquify and immediately use. If your pasteurised honey starts to taste bitter, it’s past it, so leave it outside on a plate for honey bees, wasps, etc. you should never microwave honey, not just because of the risk of it exploding, but because the localised intense heat can destroy much of the nutritional value. Dissolve it in a water bath slowly.

  • @mattia_carciola
    @mattia_carciola День назад

    As a European what I'm confused about is... Why pasteurising honey? Like, what? Why? Shelf life is already higher than your lifespan, heat treating costs and filtration not only costs but also removes stuff so the yield is decreased. I really can't see a single reason why anybody should paaturise it.
    (and here all the honey I see isn't pasteurised but still comes in all textures and flavours)

  • @grantjoseph1271
    @grantjoseph1271 Год назад +9

    Seems to be some confusion over how to soften the honey too! Boil some water, remove from heat, place jar in water. This will gently restore its liquid form without damaging any properties!

  • @----redacted---
    @----redacted--- 10 месяцев назад +160

    Raw honey: has literally been found edible in Egyptian tombs that are thousands of years old
    This absolute unit: *EXTENDS THE SHELF LIFE*

  • @Orange-borange
    @Orange-borange 6 месяцев назад +66

    Bro violated that honey bottle

  • @AngryBeerrin
    @AngryBeerrin 4 месяца назад

    I just ate from my hive today! So good!

  • @Anon-nv7bp
    @Anon-nv7bp 5 месяцев назад +1

    this guy just pasteurised his raw honey in the microwave lmao

  • @some_lilo
    @some_lilo Год назад +5

    I grew up with raw honey from the small farm in our town and that stuff was the best honey I’ve ever tasted.
    When I moved and went to buy honey and didn’t find any raw honey in the small supermarket o was devastated but took „regular“ honey with me instead. Honestly, tasted like shit after being used to the good stuff.

  • @cinnerman
    @cinnerman Год назад +65

    raw honey is so good. I recommend buying raw honey from a local source. oh also. pasteurized honey a lot of times has high fructose corn syrup in it too.

    • @racistpixel1017
      @racistpixel1017 Год назад

      Plus pasterized honey is almost pure sugar, health value is so low, its more unhealthy due sugar than healthy. All bacteries and nutrition is destroyed in pasterized one

  • @1017KushNoLove
    @1017KushNoLove Год назад +58

    As someone with a quarter bottle of raw honey in the cabinet that I haven’t touched in two years, apparently it doesn’t expire 😂

    • @thoopsy
      @thoopsy Год назад +5

      Yeah, archeologists found ancient Egyptian honey and tried it. Hadn't gone bad yet! Your honey may change forms faster, but it's not going bad. Ever. This guy's video is filled with mild misinformation, if you're interested in honey look into content made by beekeepers who know what's up.

    • @ragnkja
      @ragnkja Год назад +1

      Just keep the bottle shut so moisture can’t get in and it’ll literally last as long as the bottle can.

    • @argentummolonlabe
      @argentummolonlabe 11 месяцев назад +1

      I have honey from 1958, it is amazing!

    • @YouKnowMeDuh
      @YouKnowMeDuh 11 месяцев назад +3

      Of course not! Raw honey doesn't expire. In fact, over time, it can get a foamy film over the top which is hydrogen peroxide, which has its own uses!

    • @AG-yb8xi
      @AG-yb8xi 10 месяцев назад

      ​@@YouKnowMeDuh i still think you shouldn't keep it in plastic or metal for a long time

  • @kudahman52
    @kudahman52 Месяц назад

    When you said it extends the shelf life I knew you didn't know what you were taking about

  • @desired397
    @desired397 Год назад +30

    There's also churned/creamed honey that's also thick and opaque, but is often made from the clarified honey.

  • @sameritaco
    @sameritaco 9 месяцев назад +50

    I bought a gallon of raspberry blossom honey from kallas recently and it's the best honey I've ever had. It isn't 100% raw as they heat it slightly to make it flow through their machinery easier but it wasn't heated to the point of "pasteurization" either

    • @carlosandleon
      @carlosandleon 8 месяцев назад +7

      I just get Honey from my Grandpa - who is a beekeeper

    • @jimsmisadventuresinbeekeeping
      @jimsmisadventuresinbeekeeping 8 месяцев назад +4

      @@carlosandleon You get the absolute best honey there is, I don't trust or buy store bought honey at all, can you guess why? maybe my username says it all, lol.

  • @PresidentFunnyValentine
    @PresidentFunnyValentine 2 месяца назад +1

    It's what's made when the bees aren't using protection.

  • @lolzasouruhm179
    @lolzasouruhm179 7 месяцев назад +16

    I like grabbing local honey it’s always cool to see the color of the honey change through the year

  • @H.Sero.
    @H.Sero. 6 месяцев назад +4

    I just eat honey right from the comb chunks, best method in my opinion. It's super common to eat it that way where I'm from

    • @MejrisTigris16
      @MejrisTigris16 2 месяца назад +1

      Yeah my grandpa is a beekeeper and he has his own hives and that way to eat honey is super tasty

  • @hinoley5423
    @hinoley5423 Год назад +26

    Raw honey with bread was my most favorite breakfast when I was a kid😍

    • @A12lve
      @A12lve Год назад

      Yes! And just adding a bit of butter takes it to a whole another level

    • @amiandanna965
      @amiandanna965 Год назад

      you gotta try honey on bread with strawberry jam!!!

    • @shippuuden28
      @shippuuden28 Год назад

      sourdough, grass fed raw butter and raw honey is incredible.

  • @GermanNunez-d2p
    @GermanNunez-d2p Месяц назад

    When I started to watch this video, my phone started to smell like honey.💀

  • @fpscanada3862
    @fpscanada3862 Год назад +35

    that bear bottle honey has got lots of sugar/corn syrup added to it to bulk it up like cheap dope. Also honey doesn't expire

    • @nickdrescher1210
      @nickdrescher1210 10 месяцев назад +1

      Thank god somebody said it. The cheap stuff has a hint of a hint of honey in it. The rest is corn syrup. Honey should be unmistakable even just by smelling it, but that stuff just smells and tastes like golden syrup.

  • @OfficialAzureus
    @OfficialAzureus Год назад +20

    Bro violated that honey bear 😭💀💀

  • @bdawg1118
    @bdawg1118 Год назад +4

    Not gonna lie, honey is a crazy concept

  • @davea5884
    @davea5884 2 месяца назад

    My dude just microwaved *raw* honey. I love spending the premium to get raw honey. Just so I can get home and pasteurize it myself 😂

  • @joaogomes9405
    @joaogomes9405 Год назад +15

    I love the yellow cloudy wild flower raw honey, it's the best

  • @admiral_alman8671
    @admiral_alman8671 Год назад +9

    I just realized that the honey I used to eat at my grandparents house wasn’t just dried/crystallized honey, it was raw honey

    • @Goddess.Boann.
      @Goddess.Boann. Год назад

      No such thing as raw honey, there is honey and then there is that fake syurp shit stores try to pass off as honey.

  • @DaronStronghammer
    @DaronStronghammer 6 месяцев назад +4

    Tell me you don't know anything about honey without telling me... you gave me an essay.

  • @bobbyhill4118
    @bobbyhill4118 6 месяцев назад +14

    I get raw honey every single time. I noticed a big difference in flavor, raw filtered honey is always more crisp and it’s just better for you. I always integrate it into a preworkout food to give me carbs for training

  • @mirabilis
    @mirabilis Год назад +5

    Shelf life? Honey never spoils.

  • @Maplefoxx-vl2ew
    @Maplefoxx-vl2ew 6 месяцев назад +6

    some honey will stay completely clear forever because of less cystals in the pollen such as Acacia tree honey. it stay completely clear and will keep forever. it's immortal honey

  • @verniermoon6218
    @verniermoon6218 Год назад +12

    I love a good spoonful of raw honey in my coffee in the morning 😌

  • @Ailen-k2d
    @Ailen-k2d 2 месяца назад +4

    The clear raw honey is the best, nothing can change my mind.