Ben’s Bees Pure Raw Honey 7kg Bucket

$120.00

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Local, pure raw honey from Ben’s Bees – 7kg bucket.

Are you tired of buying unethical food products from big businesses in Australia?
Do you love supporting local Melbourne businesses, and eating produce that is healthy and natural?

Ben’s Bees honey is raw, local and made with love by happy bees.

What is raw honey you ask?

It’s exactly that, honey that has come straight from the animal, and is not treated in any way. It is taken from the hive in frames, spun with centrifugal force, and drained through a fine sieve to remove any wax particles. After that, we bottle up the honey for you and it is ready to make any dish delicious and nutritious, from breakfast cereal to a Sunday roast.

So, how does Ben’s Bees honey differ from honey you buy in the supermarket? The honey found in supermarkets is often pasteurised (heated to 70C or higher). This is done commercially so that the honey looks smoother and cleaner, is easier to handle and package, and stays at a runny consistency. However, this is an unnecessary measure. Honey from big companies also poses huge ethical problems in Australia, paying beekeepers bottom dollar for their produce, as well as often mixing local honey with imported honey from China to keep production costs at a minimum.

In comparison, Ben’s Bees raw honey is a natural, Australian product with optimum taste and the beautiful imperfections of anything that comes straight from nature. That means that raw honey will always crystallise within a few months after being harvested from the hive. This has no impact on the product whatsoever, other than giving it a thicker texture. Actually, raw honey tastes better, as heating denatures the products’ fine aromas and enzymes. Raw honey also has a lot of health benefits, as it is high in antioxidants, making it great for people with a common cold or sore throat, and, when taken daily, can assist those suffering from bad hay fever. It can even be applied externally to wounds to promote quicker healing.

 


Humans have been collecting wild honey for at least 15,000 years, and the domestication of the honey bee became one of the first forms of agriculture, about 9,000 years ago. Honey and the honey bee have become significant symbols of sweetness and fertility in many cultures. In addition to its importance as a natural sweetener, honey has traditionally been used as a preservative and to aleviate a variety of medical complaints.

An 8,000-year-old cave painting in Valencia, Spain, depicts two figures using baskets and ladders to collect wild honey. For thousands of years, honey hunters in Africa have followed small birds called honeyguides to locate bees’ nests and harvest honey. This has led to the formation of a unique relationship which benefits both man and bird. The hunters use special calls to communicate with the birds, which in turn actively seek out the hunters and guide them to the bees’ nests. The honeyguides feed upon bees’ eggs and larvae and beeswax, and rely upon their human partners to break open the hive.

In what remains the earliest evidence of apiculture, traces of beeswax have been found upon pottery dating back almost 9,000 years from ancient Turkey. The earliest-known honey was recovered from clay vessels in a tomb in Georgia from about 5,000 years ago. Several varieties of honey were interred with the local people to assist in their journey to the afterlife. Beekeeping is recorded from Egypt 4,500 years ago, where honey was used extensively in cooking, to treat medical ailments and to assist in embalming the dead. To the Egyptians, the bee often symbolised royalty and fertility, and honey has been discovered in royal tombs, including that of Tutankhamun.

Other ancient writings also make frequent references to honey, including Sumerian and Babylonian cuneiform texts, dated to around 2100 BC, and the Hittite code. Honey was a vital sweetener in Greek and Roman cuisine, and the ancient Greeks were fervent believers in the healing properties of honey, which was considered to be the ‘food of the gods’. Greek beekeepers would move their hives considerable distances to take advantage of regional vegetative cycles and optimise production, and by the 6th century BC, beekeeping had become so widespread in Greece that a law was passed to regulate the location of new hives. Beekeeping flourished throughout the Roman empire, and the advent of Christianity created great demand for beeswax candles.

Honey is mentioned more than 50 times in the bible, and the Promised Land is described as flowing with milk and honey. An apiary dating from the 10th century BC has been excavated in Tel Rehov, in Israel’s Beth Shean Valley, that is estimated to have contained 100 hives and produced half a ton of honey annually. Pure honey is considered kosher even though, strictly speaking, bees are not. In fact, honey symbolises the Jewish new year, Rosh Hashanah, when apple slices dipped in honey are traditional fare.

Honey bees have also been cultivated in China since ancient times, and honey is frequently used in traditional Chinese medicine. Similarly, ancient Indian texts (the Vedas and the Ayurveda, the origins of which can be traced back 4,000 years) document the use of honey for spiritual and therapeutic purposes. Honey has significance in Hinduism as one of the elixirs of immortality, and in Buddhism as part of the festival of Madhu Purnima. The Qur’an promotes the nutritional and medicinal value of honey, and an entire chapter is entitled ‘The Bee’. Honey bees are native to Europe, Asia and Africa, and were introduced to North America by western settlers in the early 1600s. However, the native peoples of Mexico and

Central America traditionally kept stingless bees and still use this honey for culinary purposes.

The importance of honey is intrinsically woven into human history. In medieval Europe, it was often used as a form of currency. Napoleon chose the bee to be his emblem as emperor; symbolising diligence and orderliness, and also (as the producer of honey) sweetness and benevolence. Cupid was reputed to dip his arrows in honey to make them irresistible to his unsuspecting targets.

The European Honeybee was introduced into Australia in the early 1820s, and has proliferated due to extensive native vegetation. The current popularity of beekeeping as a hobby is indicated by the fact that, of Australia’s 12,000 registered beekeepers, only 11 per cent have more than 50 hives.

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