- Joined
- Mar 9, 2016
- Messages
- 2,082
- Reaction score
- 1,103
- Location
- Gower, where all the fun happens
- Hive Type
- National
- Number of Hives
- 24 + a few nucs....this has to stop!
Mix it with a little warm water and feed it as early season food to your hives.Hi all, I jarred my last bucket few weeks back and honey had recrystallised in the jars. I have melted it again but end up with this which I can't really sell to my stockists. Any ideas why this happened and what I could do to avoid in the future please?
Thanks Emyr. I have the lables on so not an option. Are they fine particles of wax which have settled down the bottom when the honey got too runny?only way I should think to get rid of that is to sit the base of the jar in very hot water for a while
I get that split occasionally, usually a few months after bottling mixed buckets. Looks like your fructose element has crystallised and the glucose remained runny.Are they fine particles of wax which have settled down the bottom
The buyers of proper local honey are not going to be seduced by a few pence off but a discount like this will sow a seed of doubt in the customer mind: is local honey really a premium product? Sell at a discount to your mates, but in a shop a beekeeper cannot control who buys what.knock the price down a few pence to trusted customers
I've got a few of those: the set at the bottom has fermented, the upper is fine. All will go in the Bakers' bucket.let the bubbles rise to the top
I get that split occasionally, usually a few months after bottling mixed buckets. Looks like your fructose element has crystallised and the glucose remained runny.
Had a clearout yesterday and like Nantmoel, found a box or two of this and that. No point in warming for sale because by the time the bottom half has liquified the top will be over-heated. I'll warm them until clear and add to the Bakers' honey bucket, which gives me £18/kg. at market.
The buyers of proper local honey are not going to be seduced by a few pence off,but a discount like this will sow a seed of doubt in the customer mind: is local honey really a premium product? Sell at a discount to your mates, but in a shop a beekeeper cannot control who buys what.
I've got a few of those: the set at the bottom has fermented, the upper is fine. All will go in the Bakers' bucket.
View attachment 34885
No, it's the heavier crystals of honey, they sink and there's no budging them, sometimes keeping them in the warming cabinet for a few days can clear most of it, but there's usually a few traces left even then.Are they fine particles of wax which have settled down the bottom when the honey got too runny?
Yes. I turned the jars upside down and warmed them for a couple of daysNo, it's the heavier crystals of honey, they sink and there's no budging them, sometimes keeping them in the warming cabinet for a few days can clear most of it, but there's usually a few traces left even then.
True, there are plenty of shops (inc. supermarkets) with this sort on the shelf. Whether they sell, or the beekeeper replaces them next time around, is the unknown.Looks like the "Pure Raw Honey" they sell in Health food shops at a premium rate
Fmp! £18/kg for bakers honey, well done!I get that split occasionally, usually a few months after bottling mixed buckets. Looks like your fructose element has crystallised and the glucose remained runny.
Had a clearout yesterday and like Nantmoel, found a box or two of this and that. No point in warming for sale because by the time the bottom half has liquified the top will be over-heated. I'll warm them until clear and add to the Bakers' honey bucket, which gives me £18/kg. at market.
The buyers of proper local honey are not going to be seduced by a few pence off but a discount like this will sow a seed of doubt in the customer mind: is local honey really a premium product? Sell at a discount to your mates, but in a shop a beekeeper cannot control who buys what.
I've got a few of those: the set at the bottom has fermented, the upper is fine. All will go in the Bakers' bucket.
View attachment 34885
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