VEG
Queen Bee
- Joined
- Nov 10, 2008
- Messages
- 6,822
- Reaction score
- 6
- Location
- Maesteg South Wales
- Hive Type
- National
- Number of Hives
- 15+-some
pestle and motar can be used but easier just to get some that is set the way you like and use that.
you are right - density ≠ viscosity.
I used the slowest setting. It is a small hand blender, so the paddles (whatever they are called!) where under the honey level. I was careful trying to introduce as small amount of air as possible.
...
I have a 'jam maker' that was on sale from Lidl a couple of years go, therefore the bucket is surrounded up to the 3/4 level with water.
The thermostat on the jam maker is useless, so I use one of my under water probes connected to a digital thermostat which are calibrated and is accurate to 1/10th of a degree, so am not concerned on that front.
Hi Guys
I still have not yet bought a stirrer, but have tried a test
I warmed a bucket of honey at 38 degrees, but even after a week, would not reduce down to anything looser than double cream.
In my honey warmer, I put the temperature up to 48, and stirred every 10 minutes until it was liquid. It took about 40 minutes. I did not take the temperature of the honey, but in hindsight, I should have. (during this time, I can't believe a 30lb honey bucket would not have warmed to this temperature... probably midway).
I decanted 9lb into a new bucket, and added my 1lb of seed (the seed was at room temperature). I then used a hand food mixer to blend it so the seed was well mixed.
Once in this state, I put the bucket onto the cold floor of the unheated porch and left it there.
The mixture thickened quickly, and I 'tested' the honey every few days. I did not stir it again as it would have required something stronger than a food blender.
It has been in the porch for 13 days, and the density appears to be stable as it has not got thicker for a good few days. The mixture is soft but firm. soft margarine density.
My questions are:-
Have I wrecked it by heating it too high? it seems to taste ok.
Is it likely to go wrong because I did not cool the mixture to 35?
Is it likely to go wrong because I did not warm the seed up to 35?
after 13 days in a cold temperature, would I expect it to go harder, or do we think that is it?
With hindsight I should have put the remainder of the bucket without the seed in the same environment. (It is now in a fermenter making mead!)
I hope to use the new mixture as a seed for other buckets.
If this method is 'approved', at the moment I could stick with it without buying stirrers\paddles\propellers as I currently only have the capabilities of melting one bucket at a time regardless...
If the new seed is unlikely to be wrecked, I will use it for a new test. I will perform the same again, but jar it straight after blending, as the smaller volumes will accelerate the cooling and hopefully demonstrate the final result quicker.
Cheers
Pete
When you have so much hives, you should have something smarter.
To do everything quickly is not a smart choice. You really can treat stuff 24 hours or 48 hours. Then you avoid too high temperatures.
I have a warmer closet, where I can heat 200 kg honey in frames before extracting. I could warm up crystallized honey in 25 kg buckets in the closet. I can put there 200 kg ready honey
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Excellent dual use for the Sauna....!
Yeghes da
Single buckets I use a jam maker that holds 1 bucket 24 hrs @ 40c then if it’s not clear I increase temp to 45c for no more than 3 -5 hrs .How do you warm your honey if you have quite a lot of buckets? One at a time in a honey cabinet? I have an oven that can be set to 40c but I am wincing at the potential electricity bill for the amount of hours it will need.
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