"Bigbazza" > wrote in
:
> I see that there was found some honey in one of the Pharaoh's Tombs
> that was over 3000 years old!... But a lot of Honey that I have bought
> or been given (like special flower and Tree types) have been left in
> the back of my pantry through lack of use (I mainly use honey for
> Flavouring Oriental Marinades and use in boiled Veggies, like carrots
> etc) has developed a rank flavour etc....
>
> Any comments on this?
>
Honeybee's honey can last for thousands of years. Tropical stingless
bee's honey doesn't and therefore must be kept refrigerated if you want
it to last for a long time. This is because it contains a higher nectar
and pollen content than you regular honey which gives it a pleasant
acid/citris flavour.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stingless_bee
Like the European honey bee (Apis mellifera) which provides most of
Australia's commercially-produced honey, stingless bees have enlarged
areas on their back legs for carrying pollen back to the hive. After a
foraging expedition, these pollen baskets or corbiculae can be seen
stuffed full of bright orange or yellow pollen. Stingless bees also
collect nectar, which they store in an extension of their gut called a
crop. Back at the hive, the bees ripen or dehydrate the nectar droplets
by spinning them inside their mouthparts until honey is formed. Ripening
concentrates the nectar and increases the sugar content, though it is
not nearly as concentrated as the honey from true honeybees; it is much
thinner in consistency, and more prone to spoiling.
--
Peter Lucas
Brisbane
Australia
Wars begin where you will...
but they do not end where you please.
Machiavelli