The Candle & Honey Report

September candle winner: southnorthca@yahoo.ca
September, 2004 Vol 4, No. 9 

The Vineyard

Harvest Season in the Vineyard
Our Visit to Swedish Hill Vineyards
Phenolic Measurement of Wine
September Grape Recipe

From our readers
Candle W*nner & Laugh of the Month

The Candle - Honey Farm

From Flower to Flame
Farm Opens Friday September 3
Unfiltered Honey? Raw?
September Honey Recipe
From our readers
Candle W*nner & Laugh of the Month


Honeyflow Farm Main Page

 

From Flower to Flame

(Or How Beeswax Candles are made from Flowers)

 

The honeybees harvest nectar from flowers, return to the hive with this sweet floral essesence and concentrate it into honey.

 

The Honeybees consumes the honey and with their wax glands on the sides of their bodies they transform the honey into wax scales.

Workers around 6-12 days old can produce wax scales in their four pairs of wax glands. The glands are concealed between the inter-segmental membranes, but the wax scales produced can be seen, usually even with naked eyes. The scales are thin and quite clear. After workers chew them up and add saliva, it becomes more whitish.

These wax scales are used by the honeybees to make honeycombs to store their honey in.


 

 

The beekeepers harvest this honey and during the extracting process the cappings (the ends of the hexagonal cells) are cut or scraped off allowing the honey to come out.

 

 

These cappings are melted, cleaned from debris and formed into bulk beeswax.

 

The candlemaker refines this wax and crafts it into beautiful candles.

Candle Dipping
at
Honeyflow Farm

Wicks for 6 pairs of candles are on a frame and dipped into hot wax.

 

6 pairs of candles half finished.

The frame is split in half & only 3 pairs are now dipped.

 

The candles are hanging in a rack to cool between dips.

 
 
 
 
 



 

Farm opens Friday, September 3.

Farm opens Friday, September 3.


Our honeybees colonies look very good this year and we expect a good crop of honey.

The clovers and thistles have been growing rapidly and the rainy weather has caused the flowers to grow profusely. Bring your pails and jars & we will fill them.

Honey prices have varied widely the last few years. Things have stabilized and our price have gone down.

Observation Hive Tells Secrets …
The magical world of the honeybee is now yours to see through our observation hive. Let your children find the queen, and see what’s happening in the honeybees unique home.

Click here for our on line newsletter .....

 

September is the month that we begin to take our honey crop off. Most of what is harvested now goes directly to our sales stand or to road side markets. In October and November the rest of the crop is harvested and stored in barrels. The picture shows frames of honey going into our extractor. Click here for more extracting pictures.


Raw & Unprocessed Honey? Unfiltered Honey?
Pasteurized Honey? What's the difference?

These questions were from an email that was sent us from Barbara in Michigan.

Q. Your label just states honey yet you claim to have raw and unprocessed
honey. How come you do not label it raw?

A. Raw & unprocessed honey is available at our sales stand in the fall when we fill your own containers from our bulk tank. We fill this barrel with honey directly from our extracting barn and it is raw & unprocessed.

The wildflower/clover mix table honey that has been put in containers for wholesale or retail sales is not filtered or pasteurized! We warm our honey only to 130 to 135 degrees, cooler than most residential hot water tanks. This will retard granulation, a natural condition of honey for a short period of time. This low temperature warming allows us to lightly “strain” the honey through cheesecloth and pack it into containers. Any occasional honey crystals that may appear due to this more natural treatment may be melted by putting the jar of honey into hot water.

This unfiltered honey is not completely "raw" because it has been warmed slightly and therefore should not be labeled as such.

Q. If a label does not state raw then is the honey heated? Why would the honey need to be heated?

A. If the label does not state "raw" it most likely has been heated. Also very few raw honeys (with some exceptions) are liquid - raw honey will usually granulate within a few weeks.

Packers need to heat honey to retard granulation. Most customers in a grocery store think that granulated honey is a defect and will not purchase it. Large honey packers sometimes heat their honey to 160 degrees and filter it. This will keep it looking very nice on a store shelf but the taste may be degraded.

Q. I have seen some honey labeled raw and it is completely white. Does this mean it has completely crystalized?

A. Yes. Raw & unfiltered honey will usually granulate smooth and solid after a month or two.

When heated honey granulates the texture of the honey will be very coarse. These coarse crystals do not hurt anything but do not look as nice - This honey can be liquified very easily in hot water.

Q. Do you dilute your honey with water? Reason I ask is that I know of a beekeeper in Europe and he says that the standards for honey here in the States are different. Also, the honey in Europe is much thicker because supposedly the beekeepers ARE NOT allowed to dilute it but in the US they can.

A. NO REPUTABLE HONEY PRODUCER IN THE USA WOULD ADD WATER TO THEIR HONEY! Besides it being illegal it would cause the honey to ferment and become unsaleable. Honey does not remain stable if the moisture content is too high. Anybody who would say that US beekeepers routinely do such a thing is either uninformed or has a political agenda.

Many Europeans love to bash the USA. It is true the standards in the USA are different - They are much higher. With all the different governments in Europe there are no uniform regulations - every country does whatever it wants. The USA has very strict food & drug laws. Many treatments to honeybees that are used in Europe are not legal in the USA.

Recently, China was caught using an illegal antibiotic and it was found in their honey. This honey did not pass our standards and was not allowed to enter the US.

The thickness or density of honey can vary with the flower source. Since many honey producers in Europe are small (like we are), possibly they can sell their honey with less processing.

Q. I have purchased your honey at a vegetable stand in Romeo, Michigan. It was labeled as just plain honey so that means it was heated to 130 or 135 degrees. Do you plan to sell your raw unheated honey at these stands? I have been to your farm to pick grapes (these are wonderful) but I did not purchase the honey as I had a jar at home from Romeo at the time.

A. We do sell raw honey at these types of fruit markets in 2.5 lb containers - they are usually marked as "creamed honey".

Q. Is the raw unprocessed honey at your farm higher in cost than the slightly heated honey?

A. The raw unprocessed honey sold from our bulk tank and poured directly into a container that you bring to the farm will cost much less. (This year $1.50/lb) When we sell honey to roadside stands we must add in warming, bottling, labeling and delivery charges.


Q. I have heard that honey can be liquified in a sunny window. Is this a good idea? Any chance that the sun can damage the honey?

A. Yes, that can work, although you should make sure it does not get too hot. Remove it from the window when done. Many people re-liquify honey by putting the honey in hot water bath.

Q. Do you plan on introducing other types of flowers so that you can have different honey? For example, some of the beekeepers in Europe use the flowers of the linden tree. The honey is almost green and the taste is very good. Also, the scent of the flowers is heavenly.

A. Since we are also very active in our vineyard operation we do not have the time to separate many of the different types of honey. We start taking our honey off in September and most of it is sold at our farm or roadside markets. When the vineyard closes in October we return to the beeyards and the rest of the crop is removed. I applaud the beekeepers that bottle honey from different flower sources.

Thank you for answering all of my questions. Looking forward to picking grapes this year and loading my jars with honey. I have tried many honeys in the area and I think that next to Europe's honey, yours has the best texture and taste.

Barbara in Michigan.

 

 

Peanut Butter Toasties from Honey.com


- Makes 8 servings -


Ingredients:

1-1/4 cups granola with raisins
1/4 cup creamy peanut butter
2 slices whole grain bread
1/3 cup honey

Directions

Mix granola, honey, peanut butter and a pinch of salt in a medium bowl.

Toast bread in toaster oven. Remove toast from oven and spread a generous amount of the granola mixture to cover completely.

Return to toaster oven and bake 3 minutes at 350°F until mixture softens. Cut into quarters and serve warm or at room temperature.



Note: Honey should not be fed to infants under one year of age. Honey is a safe and wholesome food for children and adults. More details ....

Do you have a great honey recipe - please and we will put it in our newsletter.

From our readers

This is a section for comments/questions/recipes from our readers. Please read the comments & feel free to put your 2 cents worth in.

Visit the Readers Comments page to view all the content of these messages. Here are samples of this months e-mails:  

Jelly Making,  ••  Foch grapes,  ••  Freezing Honey,  ••  Niagara grapes,  ••  Bev Art Brewer & Winemaker Supply,  ••  Concords,  ••  St.Pepin grapes,  ••  Friends from the Czech Republic,  ••  2gal Pails of Unprocessed Honey

The "From our Readers" Page



Candle W*nner & Laugh of the Month

Congratulations!


September candle winner: southnorthca@yahoo.ca


Will this months w*nner,
southnorthca@yahoo.ca
please contact us and that I can ship your candles.

Our list of previous candle w*nners.


Click below for something silly to end this newsletter with.

Laugh of the month: Optical Illusions

See You Next Month!

 

Last Months Newsletter - August, 2004

The Vineyard

August in the Vineyard
Our Visit to Hunt Vineyards
Sulphide Detection
August Grape Recipe

From our readers
Candle W*nner & Laugh of the Month

The Candle - Honey Farm

Candle Industry Facts
August at the Honey Farm
African Honey Bee Update
August Honey Recipe
From our readers
Candle W*nner & Laugh of the Month

 

Honeyflow Farm Main Page

 

Honeyflow Farm
4939 Mill Rd.    PO Box 275
Dryden, Michigan 48428
(810) 796-2344 (Phone & Fax)


Comments or questions concerning Honeyflow Farm
should be addressed by clicking on the link: