Hi Gunar,
The label on the buckwheat honey that I have says that it is
unpasturized so it should have crystalised so could there be another
reason why it is still runny after being over a year old?
Dennis
Gunar wrote:
----- Original Message ----- From: "John McLean" <h...@bigpond.net.au>
To: <silver-list@eskimo.com>
Sent: Sunday, July 16, 2006 8:22 AM
Subject: Re: CS>Honey as an antibiotic - heat
An other thing, I remember was that if honey "candied" it was impure
honey, and I can't remember what caused it to "candy". It appears
that pure honey will mainintain its liquid form for years.
John in Australia
Hello John -- sorry, but you are mistaken about "candied" honey
being impure: ... just the opposite is true; "candied" or crystalised
honey occurs when the honey is raw, that is, when the honey has
NOT been subjected to high enough temperature in processing it.
Manuka honey is a perfect example of raw honey, which is crystalised.
Honey which remains runny, or "liquid", has had its enzymes
destroyed by heat during processing, and so has lost much of its
health and medicinal value.
Regards,
Gunar in Sydney.
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