Gave that up after the first two years, for two reasons.fine filter using a conical nylon strainer before jarring
Cut the top few inches off another bucket the same as the one you are straining into and glue a couple of lugs under the rim of the one you have cut up. That sits on top of and just inside the lower bucket and keeps the seive slightly above the surface on the honey as the bucket fills to the top, Simples ..Can anyone recommend a sieve stand which will hold the straining sieve above the honey bucket while extracting so that it doesn’t dip into the honey as it fills?
Easily done, but maybe Val means to use a conical filter, which will sit buried in a bucket.Why not use the round pan shaped sieve with the pull out handles that rests on top of the bucket?
Which is it, Val: double coarse strainer or fine conical nylon filter?straining sieve above the honey bucket
It’s the double course strainer that we use.Easily done, but maybe Val means to use a conical filter, which will sit buried in a bucket.
Which is it, Val: double coarse strainer or fine conical nylon filter?
The Abelo version is described confusingly as a strainer but the small print states that it's made with fine nylon mesh (and sounds like a filter to me).
We use one of these but it means that the bucket can’t be filled fully as the bottom of the sieve/strainer sits in the honey as it approaches the top of the bucket.Why not use the round pan shaped sieve with the pull out handles that rests on top of the bucket?
They do, and well worth the moneyCarl Fritz also do some elegant double honey tap tank strainers. Too complex to link to by phone
The Swienty will do the job.We use one of these but it means that the bucket can’t be filled fully as the bottom of the sieve/strainer sits in the honey as it approaches the top of the bucket.
Enter your email address to join: