Posted on 10/19/2012 5:01:39 PM PDT by Dallas59
First we find out that we're getting ripped off in the fish department. Now, a new study commissioned by Food Safety News shows that most of the honey on supermarket shelves isn't really honey.
More than 60 types of honey from several major supermarkets, drug stores, and shopping clubs--including Stop and Shop, Safeway, Wegman's,A&P, Kroger, CVS, Walgreens, Sam's Club, and Walmart--were tested by Vaughn Bryant, a professor at Texas A&M University. He found that most of them had all of the pollen filtered out. Without any pollen, it's impossible to figure out whether the honey came from a safe source, or whether it's even actual honey at all; much of the ultra-filtered honey may come from China, may be contaminated, or may be diluted with High Fructose Corn Syrup.
(Excerpt) Read more at shine.yahoo.com ...
That’s funny. We used to dump our planes urinals in the “honey wagon” at Kamh Rhan Bay.
Dittos 4 miles down the road is some of the best honey i ever had right from the hive fresh spun glistening gold sweetness ...
I don’t see how you could fake honey with fructose corn syrup unless you’ve never tasted honey before ...
Don’t buy honey from a supermarket period.
This probably does not apply to honey, but I’ll mention it anyway. The report said that the produce at farmer’s markets (which is much more expensive than at the local supermarket, I have found) is often lower quality than the produce that these same farmers sell to wholesalers (and which ends up in supermarkets) because the farmers have discovered that the dumbed up public thinks that veggies and fruits that don’t look perfect are more authentic.
I just bought two small “bear” bottles of Kroger Pure Clover Honey. Looking at the bottle, it says “Pure Clover Honey”, “Grade A, Product of USA”.
This is part of my prepper supplies and I want honey with the longest life which is, without pollen it lasts forever.
This article is extremely misleading.
Not much of a Honey Shop, is it?
They might be selling fake ketchup too
"Real tomato ketchup, Eddie?"
"Nothing but the best!"
It was a joke. I just remember the honey wagons when I was stationed in Germany back in the sixties.
One of the difficult to detect tricks is the use of wheat flout in honey, maple syrup, sorghum (for what reason I have no idea ~ maybe trying to trick Ethiopians or something), or various sorts of candy. Properly processed it has most of the characteristics of un-refined sugar and can "pass" ~
I bought some fried chicken and a biscuit several years ago and put honey on them. Something was wrong. I looked at the ingredients on the honey packet, and it was honey flavored syrup.
I do not believe it is impossible to tell the difference by chemical testing between honey and corn syrup.
re: So, honey keeps longer with the pollen removed, so we can’t prove it’s honey if there is no pollen, so it’s all fake because we can’t prove it isn’t. BS.
My take on it as well.
Wheat flour would make the honey unsuitable for my gluten intolerant innards.
Bee sure to bee really careful about that.
Actually some good information from NPR of all places:
http://www.npr.org/blogs/thesalt/2011/11/25/142659547/relax-folks-it-really-is-honey-after-all
Anybody know about Trader Joe’s brand Clover Honey?
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