|
CHAPTER 2
HONEY 1
Contents - Previous - Next
2.1 Introduction
Honey is the most important primary product
of beekeeping both from a quantitative and
an economic point of view. It was also the
first bee product used by humankind in ancient
times. The history of the use of honey is
parallel to the history of man and in virtually
every culture evidence can be found of its
use as a food source and as a symbol employed
in religious, magic and therapeutic ceremonies
(Cartland, 1970; Crane, 1980; Zwaeneprel,
1984) an appreciation and reverence it owes
among other reasons to its unique position
until very recently, as the only concentrated
form of sugar available to man in most parts
of the world. The same cultural richness
has produced an equally colourful variety
of uses of honey in other products (see Figure
2.1).
"Honey is the natural sweet substance
produced by honeybees from the nectar of
blossoms or from the secretion of living
parts of plants or excretions of plant sucking
insects on the living parts of plants, which
honeybees collect, transform and combine
with specific substances of their own, store
and leave in the honey comb to ripen and
mature. This is the general definition of honey in the Codex
Alimentarius (1989) in which all commercially
required characteristics of the product are
described. The interested reader is also
referred to other texts such as "Honey,
a comprehensive survey" (Crane, 1975).
Honey in this bulletin, will refer to the
honey produced by Apis mellifera unless otherwise specified. There are other
honeybee species which make honey, and other
bees and even wasps which store different
kinds of honeys as their food reserves. More
details on honey from other bees are given
in section 2.11.
2.2 Physical characteristics of honey
Viscosity
Freshly extracted honey is a viscous liquid.
Its viscosity depends on a large variety
of substances and therefore varies with its
composition and particularly with its water
content (Table 2.1 and 2.2). Viscosity is
an important technical parameter during honey
processing, because it reduces honey flow
during extraction, pumping, settling, filtration,
mixing and bottling. Raising the temperature
of honey lowers its viscosity (Table 2.3)
a phenomenon widely exploited during industrial
honey processing. Some honeys, however, show
different characteristics in regard to viscosity:
Heather (Calluna vulgaris) Manuka (Leptospermum scoparium) and Carvia callosa are described as thixotrophic which means
they are gel-like (extremely viscous) when
standing still and turn liquid when agitated
or stirred. By contrast a number of Eucalyptus
honeys show the opposite characteristics.
Their viscosity increases with agitation.
|
Figure 2.1: A display of various products
in which honey
is an ingredient.
|
Table 2.1:
Variation of the viscosity of honey at 250C, containing 16.5% water, according to the
botanical origin
and therefore the composition of the honey
(Munro, 1943).
|
Type
|
Viscosity (poise)
|
|
Sage
|
115
|
|
White clover
|
94
|
|
Sweet clover
|
87
|
Table 2.2:
Variation of the viscosity of white clover
honey at 250 C according to
its water content (Munro, 1943).
|
Water content
(%)
|
Viscosity
(poise)
|
|
13.7
|
420
|
|
15.5
|
138
|
|
18.2
|
48
|
|
20.2
|
20
|
Table 2.3:
Viscosity of sweet clover honey containing
16.1% water according to temperature (Munro,
1943).
|
Temperature
(°C)
|
Viscosity
(poise)
|
|
13.7
|
600.0
|
|
20.6
|
189.6
|
|
29.0
|
68.4
|
|
39.4
|
21.4
|
|
48.1
|
10.7
|
|
71.1
|
2.6
|
Density
Another physical characteristic of practical
importance is density. Honey density, expressed
as specific gravity in Table 2.4, is greater
than water density, but it also depends on
the water content of the honey (Table 2.4).
Because of the variation in density it is
sometimes possible to observe distinct stratification
of honey in large storage tanks. The high
water content (less dense) honey settles
above the denser, drier honey. Such inconvenient
separation can be avoided by more thorough
mixing.
Table 2.4:
True specific gravity of honeys with different
water content (White, 1975a).
|
Water content
(%)
|
Specific gravity at 20°C
|
Water
content
(%)
|
Specific gravity at 20°C
|
Water
content
(%)
|
Specific gravity at 20°C
|
|
13.0
|
1.4457
|
16.0
|
1.4295
|
19.0
|
1.4101
|
|
14.0
|
1.4404
|
17.0
|
1.4237
|
20.0
|
1.4027
|
|
15.0
|
1.4350
|
18.0
|
1.4171
|
21.0
|
1.3950
|
Hygroscopicity
The strongly hygroscopic character of honey
is important both in processing and for final
use. In end products containing honey this
tendency to absorb and hold moisture is often
a desired effect such as, for example, in
pastry and bread. During processing or storage
however, the same hygroscopicity can become
problematic, causing difficulties in preservation
and storage due to excessive water content.
From Table 2.5 it can be readily seen that normal honey
with a water content of 18.3 % or less will
absorb moisture from the air at a relative
humidity of above 60%.
Table 2.5
Approximate equilibrium between relative
humidity (RH) of ambient air and water
content of a clover honey (White, 1975a).
|
Air (%RH)
|
Honey (% water content)
|
|
50
|
15.9
|
|
55
|
16.8
|
|
60
|
18.3
|
|
65
|
20.9
|
|
70
|
24.2
|
|
75
|
28.3
|
|
80
|
33.1
|
Surface tension
It is the low surface tension of honey that
makes it an excellent humectant in cosmetic
products The surface tension varies with
the origin of the honey and is probably due
to colloidal substances. Together with high
viscosity, it is responsible for the foaming
characteristics of honey.
Thermal properties
For the design of honey processing plants
its thermal properties have to be taken into
account. The heat absorbing capacity, i.e.
specific heat, varies from 0.56 to 0.73 cal/g/0C according to its composition and state
of crystallization. The thermal conductivity
varies from 118 to 143 x 10-~ cal/cm2/sec/0C (White, 1975a). One can therefore calculate
the amount of heat, cooling and mixing necessary
to treat a certain amount of honey, i.e.
before and after filtration or pasteurization.
The relatively low heat conductivity, combined
with high viscosity leads to rapid overheating
from point-heat sources and thus the need
for careful stirring and for heating only
in water baths.
Colour
Colour in liquid honey varies from clear
and colourless (like water) to dark amber
or black (see Figure 2.2). The various honey
colours are basically all nuances of yellow
amber, like different dilutions or concentrations
of caramelized sugar, which has been used
traditionally as a colour standard. More
modern methods for measuring honey colour
are described below. Colour varies with botanical
origin, age and storage conditions, but transparency
or clarity depends on the amount of suspended
particles such as pollen. Less common honey
colours are bright yellow (sunflower) reddish
undertones (chestnut) greyish (eucalyptus)
and greenish (honeydew). Once crystallized,
honey turns lighter in colour because the
glucose crystals are white. Some of the honeys
reportedly "as white as milk" in
some parts of East Africa are finely crystallized
honeys which are almost water white, i.e.
colourless, in their liquid state.
The most important aspect of honey colour
lies in its value for marketing and determination
of its end use. Darker honeys are more often
for industrial use, while lighter honeys
are marketed for direct consumption. In many
countries with a large honey market, consumer
preferences are determined by the colour
of honey (as an indication of a preferred
flavour) and thus, next to general quality
determinations, colour is the single most
important factor determining import and wholesale
prices.
Honey colour is frequently given in millimetres
on a Pfund scale (an optical density reading
generally used in international honey trade)
or according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture
classifications (White, 1975c and Crane,
1980):
| USDA colour standards |
Pfund scale (mm) |
| - water white |
0 to 8 |
| - extra white |
> 8 to 17 |
| - white |
> 17 to 34 |
| - extra light amber |
> 34 to 50 |
| - light amber |
> 50 to 85 |
| - amber |
> 85 to 114 |
| -darkamber |
> 114 |
|

Figure 2.2: Different coloured honeys of
unifloral and
multifloral origin. (courtesy of F. Intoppa)
|
More recent but not widely practised methods
of colour description use spectral colour
absorption of honey (Aubert and Gonnet, 1983;
Rodriguez L6pez, 1985).
Crystallization
Crystallization is another important characteristic
for honey marketing, though not for price
determination. In temperate climates most
honeys crystallize at normal storage temperatures.
This is due to the fact that honey is an
oversaturated sugar solution, i.e. it contains
more sugar than can remain in solution. Many
consumers still think that if honey has crystallized
it has gone bad or has been adulterated with
sugar.
The crystallization results from the formation
of monohydrate glucose crystals, which vary
in number, shape, dimension and quality with
the honey composition and storage conditions.
The lower the water and the higher the glucose
content of honey, the faster the crystallization.
Temperature is important, since above 25
° and below 5 °C virtually no crystallization occurs. Around
14°C is the optimum temperature for fast
crystallization, but also the presence of
solid particles (e.g. pollen grains) and
slow stirring result in quicker crystallization
(see 2.12.2). Usually, slow crystallization
produces bigger and more irregular crystals.
During crystallization water is freed. Consequently,
the water content of the liquid phase increases
and with it the risk of fermentation. Thus,
partially crystallized honey may present
preservation problems, which is why controlled
and complete crystallization is often induced
deliberately. In addition, partially crystallized
or reliquified honey is not an attractive
presentation for retail shelves (see Figure
2.3).
a)
|
b)
Figure 2.3: Honeys in different stages of
crystallization, (a) fermentation in partially
crystallized honey and (b) different stages
of reliquification after previous crystallization
due to storage over very long periods of
time or at relatively high temperatures.
These unattractive changes can be avoided
by controlled crystallization, proper storage
and possibly pasteurization. (courtesy of
F. Intoppa)
|
2.3 The composition of honey
The average composition of American honeys,
more or less representative of all honeys,
is shown in Table 2.6. Table 2.7 lists the
various components identified in honeys from
all around the world.
Sugars account for 95 to 99% of honey dry matter. The majority
of these are the simple sugars fructose and
glucose which represent 85-95% of total sugars. Generally, fructose is more
abundant than glucose (see Table 2.6). This
predominance of simple sugars and particularly
the high percentage of fructose are responsible
for most of the physical and nutritional
characteristics of honey. Small quantities
of other sugars are also present, such as
disaccharides (sucrose, maltose and isomaltose)
and a few trisaccharides and oligosaccharides.
Though quantitatively of minor importance,
their presence can provide information about
adulteration and the botanical origin of
the honey.
Water is quantitatively the second most important
component of honey. Its content is critical,
since it affects the storage of honey. Only
honeys with less than 18% water can be stored
with little to no risk of fermentation. The
final water content depends on a number of
environmental factors during production such
as weather and humidity inside the hive,
but also on nectar conditions and treatment
of honey during extraction and storage. It
can be reduced before or after extraction
by special techniques (see 2.6.9).
Among the minor constituents organic acids are the most important and of these gluconic acid,
which is a by-product of enzymatic digestion
of glucose, predominates. The organic acids
are responsible for the acidity of honey
and contribute largely to its characteristic
taste.
Minerals are present in very small quantities, potassium being the
most abundant. Dark honeys, particularly
honeydew honeys are the richest in minerals.
Other trace elements include nitrogenous compounds among which the enzymes originate from salivary
secretions of the worker honeybees. They
have an important role in the formation of
the honey. Their commercial importance is
not related to human nutrition, but to their
fragility and uniqueness. Thus their reduction
or absence in adulterated, overheated or
excessively stored honeys serves as an indicator
of freshness. The main enzymes in honey are
invertase (saccharase) diastase (amylase)
and glucose oxidase.
Traces of other proteins, enzymes or amino
acids as well as water soluble vitamins are thought to result from pollen contamination
in honey.
Virtually absent in newly produced honey,
hydroxvmethylfurfural (HMF) is a byproduct of fructose decay,
formed during storage or during heating.
Thus, its presence is considered the main
indicator of honey deterioration.
Even though some of the substances responsible
for honey colour and flavour have been identified
(see Table 2.7) the majority are still unknown.
It is more than likely that honeys from different
botanical origins contain different aromatic
and other substances which contribute to
the specific colours and flavours and thus
allow to distinguish one honey from another.
Similarly, it is very likely that, depending
on their botanical origin, honeys contain
traces of pharmacologically active substances.
Some of them have been identified, such as
those responsible for the toxicity of certain
honeys (see also section 2.9), but for the
majority of possible substances, scientific
verification requires further studies.
Table 2.6
Average composition of U.S honeys and ranges
of values (White, et al., 1962)
|
Component
(% except pH and diastase valute)
|
Average
|
Standard deviation
|
Range
|
| Water |
<>17.2
|
1.5
|
13.4 - 22.9
|
| Fructose |
38.2
|
2.1
|
27.2 - 44.3
|
| Glucose |
31.3
|
3.0
|
22.0 - 40.7
|
| Sucrose |
1.3
|
0.9
|
0.2 - 7.6
|
| Maltose (reducing disaccharides calculated
as maltose) |
7.3
|
2.1
|
2.7 - 16.0
|
| Higher sugars |
1.5
|
1.0
|
0.1 - 8.5
|
| Free acids (as gluconic acid) |
0.43
|
0.16
|
0.13 - 092
|
| Lactone (as glucolactone) |
0.14
|
0.07
|
0.0 - 0.37
|
| Total acid (as gluconic acid) |
0.57
|
0.20
|
0.17 - 1.17
|
| Ash |
0.169
|
0.15
|
0.020 - 1.028
|
| Nitrogen |
0.041
|
0.026
|
0.000 - 0.133
|
| pH |
3.91
|
-
|
3.42 - 6.10
|
| Diastase value |
20.8
|
9.8
|
2.1 - 61.2
|
2.4 The physiological effects of honey
2.4.1 Unconfirmed circumstantial evidence
For thousands of years honey was the only
source of concentrated sugar. uniqueness,
scarcity and desirability connected it to
divinity very early in human history thus
ascribing to it symbolic, magic and therapeutic
significance. Much of the myth many of the
traditional medicinal uses have continued
until today.
Few of these medicinal benefits have seen
scientific confirmation and they are not
always exclusive to honey. The majority are
due to the high sugar content and therefore
can also be found in other sweet substances
with high sugar contents. It was not by accident
that sugar, when first introduced to Europe,
was considered a medicine for many diseases
and was used with caution.
The major properties and effects commonly
attributed to honey (Donadieu, 1983) are
briefly described below, but there are hundreds
of different local uses in various countries,
according to the specific cultures and traditions,
and it is impossible to mention all of them.
The Koran also mentions several uses for
honey and other bee products (El Banby, 1987).
Nutritional benefits
Honey is said to facilitate better physical
performance and resistance to fatigue, particularly
for repeated effort; it also promotes higher
mental efficiency. It is therefore used by
both the healthy and the sick for any kind
of weakness, particularly in the case of
digestive or assimilative problems. Improved
growth of non-breast fed newborn infants,
improved calcium fixation in bones and curing
anaemia and anorexia may all be attributed
to some nutritional benefit or stimulation
from eating honey.
Benefits to the digestive apparatus
Honey is said to improve food assimilation
and to be useful for chronic and infective
intestinal problems such as constipation,
duodenal ulcers and liver disturbances. Salem
(1981) and Haffejee and Moosa (1985) have
reported successful treatment of various
gastrointestinal disorders.
Benefits to the respiratory system
In temperate climates and places with considerable
temperature fluctuations, honey is a well
known remedy for colds and mouth, throat
or bronchial irritations and infections.
The benefits, apart from antibacterial effects,
are assumed to relate to the soothing and
relaxing effect of fructose.
Benefits to skin and wound healing
Honey is used in moisturizing and nourishing
cosmetic creams, but also in pharmaceutical
preparations applied directly on open wounds,
sores, bed sores, ulcers, varicose ulcers
and burns. It helps against infections, promotes
tissue regeneration, and reduces scarring
also in its pure, unprocessed form (Hutton,
1966; Manjo, 1975; Armon, 1980 and Dumronglert,
1983). If applied immediately, honey reduces
blistering of burns and speeds regeneration
of new tissue. Many case histories are reported
in the literature for human as well as veterinary
medicine (sores, open wounds and teat lesions
in cows). A cream, applied three times per
day and prepared from equal parts of honey,
rye flour and olive oil, has been successfully
used on many sores and open wounds -even
gangrenous wounds in horses (Lu~hrs, 1935). Lu cke (1935) successfully tested a honey
and cod liver oil mixture suspended in a
simple non-reactive cream base on open wounds
in humans, but he gave no details on proportions.
|
Table 2.7:
List of coupoponds found in honey, but not
necessarily present in all honeys
(from Gonnet and Vache, 1985 modified with
data from Withe,
1975b Bogdanov and Crane, 1990)

|
Benefit to eye disorders
Clinical cases or traditional claims that
honey reduces and cures eye cataracts, cures
conjunctivitis and various afflictions of
the cornea if applied directly into the eye,
are known from Europe (Mikhailov, 1950), Asia, and Central America. This is said to
be more true for Meliponid and Trigonid honeys
from South and Central America and India.
There are also case histories of ceratitis
rosacea and corneal ulcers, healed with pure
honey or a 3 % sulphidine ointment in which
Vaseline was replaced by honey.
Medicine-like benefit
Frequently, specific benefits of unifloral
honeys are reported, based on the traditional
assumption that honey made from the nectar
of a medicinal plant has the same or similar
beneficial activity as the one recognized
for the whole plant or some parts of it.
Even if no transfer of active ingredients
is involved, mechanisms similar to homeopathic
potentiation are possible. Empirically effective
therapies such as Bach flower therapy and
aroma-therapy suggest that there can be much
more to the medicinal value of honey than
chemical analysis and quantification reveals.
These claims are not supported by orthodox
scientific evidence.
Diabetes
Frequently, claims are voiced that honey
is good for diabetics. This is unlikely to
find confirmation because of its high sugar
content. However, it is better than products
made with cane sugar, as a study by Katsilambros
et al., (1988) has shown. It revealed that
insulin levels were lower when compared to
the uptake of equal caloric values of other
foods, but blood sugar level was equal or
higher than in the other compared products
shortly after eating. In healthy individuals,
the consumption of honey produced lower blood
sugar readings than the consumption of the
same quantity of sucrose (Shambaugh et al.,
1990).
Ayurvedic medicine
Traditional, but well-studied medicinal systems
as the ayurvedic medicine of India, use honey
predominantly as a vehicle for faster absorption
of various drugs such as herbal extracts.
Secondarily, it is also thought to support
the treatment of several more specific ailments,
particularly those related to respiratory
irritations and infections, mouth sores and
eye cataracts. It also serves as a general
tonic for newborn infants (see also section
2.9), the young and the elderly, the convalescent
and hard working farmers (Nananiaya, 1992,
personal communication). In general, no distinction
is being made between honey from Apis mellifera A. cerana or A. dorsata.
Other benefits
Honey is said to normalize kidney function,
reduce fevers and help insomnia. It is also
supposed to help recovery from alcohol intoxication
and protect the liver; effects also ascribed
to fructose syrups. Heart, circulation and
liver ailments and convalescent patients
in general improved after injection with
solutions of 20 and 40% honey in water (Kaul,
1967).
2.4.2 Scientific evidence
According to scientific evidence it would
be better to consider honey as a food, rather
than a medicine. Most of the benefits described
above, at least for internal use, can most
likely be ascribed to nutritional effects
of some kind. On the other hand, our scientific
understanding of cause and effect, typically
only confirmed if a single compound measurably
affects a well defined symptom, is far too
limited to explain possibly more complex
and subtle, particularly synergistic interactions.
Energy source
As food, honey is mainly composed of the
simple sugars fructose and glucose, which
form the basis of almost all indications
on how, when and why to use it. The main
consideration is the fact that honey provides
immediately available calories, from which
it derives its energy value for healthy and
sick people: quick access to energy without
requiring lengthy or complicated digestive
action. The same direct absorption also carries
a risk of pathological sugar metabolism,
such as diabetes and obesity.
Non-energetic nutrients
Often honey is recommended because of its
content of other nutrients like vitamins
and minerals, but their quantity is so low
that it is unrealistic to think they can
provide any significant supplement in a deficient
diet (Table 2.8). Similar arguments are made
for the nutritional and health benefits from
most other bee products, particularly pollen
and royal jelly. Although their beneficial
characteristics have been shown in numerous
cases, they cannot be based on simple numeric
values, i.e. X amount of substance Y. Yet,
it is well known that the quality and availability
of a nutrient is important for its usefulness
to the body. Micronutrients in unprocessed
honey can be assumed to be of the highest
quality possible. Thus from a nutritional
point of view, a synergistic balancing effect
or one that unlocks the availability of other
nutrients already present, is one of the
more plausible yet untested hypotheses.
Topical applications
Topical applications under controlled conditions
have shown accelerated wound healing in animals
(Bergman et al., 1983, El Banby et al. 1989)
and of experimental burn wounds in rats (Burlando,
1978) but also of various types of wounds,
including post-operative ones in humans (Cavanagh
et al., 1970; Kandil et al., 1987a, b and
1989; Effem, 1988 and Green, 1988). Similar,
yet not equal, effects are obtained with
the application of purified sucrose and special
polysaccharide powders (Chirife et al., 1982).
External as well as internal wounds from
operations become bacteriologically sterile
within a few days and dry out. The simultaneous
stimulation of tissue regeneration by honey
reduces scarring and healing times. In addition,
dressings applied with honey do not stick
to the wounds or delicate new skins. In many
tropical field hospitals, where antibiotics
and other medicines are scarce, honey has
been employed successfully for a long time.
Table 2.8:
Nutrients in honey in relation to human requirements
(Crane, 1980)
|
Nutrient
|
Unit
|
Average amount in 100 g honey
|
Recommended daily intake
|
| Energy equivalent
Vitamins
A
B1 (Thiamin)
B2 (Riboflavin)
Nicotinic acid (niacin)
B6 (Pyridoxine)
Pantothenic acid
Bc (Folic acid)
B12 (Cyanocobaltamine)
C (Ascorbic acid)
D
E (Tocopherol)
H (Biotin)
Minerals
Calcium
Chlorine
Copper
Iodine
Iron
Magnesium
Phosphorous
Potassium
Sodium
Zinc
|
kcal
I.U.
mg.
mg.
mg.
mg.
mg.
mg.
mg.
m g
mg.
I.U.
I.U.
mg.
mg.
mg.
mg.
mg.
mg.
mg.
mg.
mg.
mg.
mg.
|
304
-
0.004 - 0.006
0.002- 0.06
0.11.- 0.36
0.008 - 0.32
0.02 - 0.11
-
-
2.2 - 2.4
-
-
-
4 - 30
2 - 20
0.01 - 0.1
-
- - 3.4
0.7 - 13
2 - 60
10 - 470
0.6 - 40
0.2 0.5
|
2800
5000
1.5
1.7
20
2.0
10
0.4
6
60
400
30
0.3
1000
2.0
0.15
18
400
1000
-
-
15
|
Antibacterial activity
Antibacterial activity is the easiest to
test and is probably the most studied biological
activity of honey. In normal honey it is
attributed to high sugar concentration and
acidity (pH range 3.5 to 5.0). Yet, since
also diluted honey has shown antibacterial
activity, the active ingredient was attributed
to an elusive substance generically termed
"inhibin". Much of this activity
was later attributed to hydrogen peroxide
(H202) an enzymatic by-product during the formation
of gluconic acid from glucose. The responsible
enzyme, glucose oxidase is basically inactive
in concentrated normal honey. Thus, in honey
solutions (diluted honey) with the right
pH, antibacterial activity is largely due
to the presence of hydrogen peroxide. The
biological significance of such a mechanism
arises from the requirement to protect immature
honey (with high moisture content) inside
the colony until higher sugar concentrations
are achieved.
Both mechanisms can partially explain the
sterilizing effect of honey on wounds and
some of its efficacy against cold infections,
but it does not explain its beneficial effect
on burn wounds (Heggers, et al., 1987) and
faster wound healing with less scarred tissue.
Subralimanyam (1993) has experienced 100%
acceptance of skin grafts after storage in
honey for up to 12 weeks. Antibacterial activity
varies greatly between different types of
honey (Dustmann, 1979; Revathy and Banerji,
1980; Jeddar et al., 1985 and Molan et al.,
1988). In addition to glucose oxidase, honey
seems to contain other mostly unknown substances
with antibacterial effects, among which are
polyphenols. These other factors have been
identified in a few cases (Toth et al., 1987;
Bogdanov, 1989 and Molan et al., 1989) but
as a whole there are few scientific studies
on the various claims of the beneficial effects
of honey. However, it has been well demonstrated
that most of the antibacterial activities
of honey are lost after heating or prolonged
exposure to sunlight (Dustmann, 1979).
Information sources on honey therapy
Mladenov (1972) published a book (in Rumanian)
on honey therapy in Rumania and there are
several articles on honey therapy in Apimondia
(1976) as well as in Crane (1975 and 1990).
The American Apitherapy Society collects
case histories and scientific information
on all therapeutical uses of bee products.
2.5 The use of honey today
2.5.1 As a food
Honey is most commonly consumed in its unprocessed
state, i.e. liquid, crystallized or in the
comb. In these forms it is taken as medicine,
eaten as food or incorporated as an ingredient
in various food recipes.
However, honey is considered a food only
in a few societies such as those of the industrialized
countries in Europe and North America, Latin
America, North Africa, the Near East and
increasingly in Japan. In most parts of Africa
it is used for brewing honey beer and to
a much lesser degree, as medicine. In most
of Asia it is generally regarded as a medicine
or at most an occasional sweet. High per
capita consumption in industrialized nations
(see 2.10) does not reflect the consumption
of unprocessed honey per person but includes
a very large quantity of honey used in industrial
food production, i.e. as a food ingredient.
In order to increase consumption and to make
the various honeys more attractive, a large
variety of packaging and semi-processed and
pure honey products are marketed. Though
they are strictly still "only"
honey, their form of presentation can add
a certain value to the primary product and
is therefore briefly discussed here. One
of the more appreciated forms, price wise
at least, of selling natural honey seems
to be honey in its natural comb. Including
pieces of comb honey in jars with liquid
honey (chunk honey) is very attractive to
many consumers and appears to disperse suspicions
of adulteration. Creamed honey (soft, finely
crystallized honey) is a very pleasant product
which is convenient in use because it does
not drip. Honey is sometimes "enhanced"
by adding pollen, propolis and/or royal jelly
without changing the state of the honey itself.
These products are described in the pollen,
propolis and royal jelly chapters. For other
"improvements" in the form and
size of packaging see section 2.6.11.
In some countries the appearance of the marketed
honey is not very important, i.e. it may
be liquid, crystallized or semi-crystallized
and with or without wax particles etc. Therefore
it can be bottled as it is. In other countries,
consumers want not only clean honey but also
prefer liquid honey. Consumer education may
change this attitude, particularly where
it is based on the widespread but false belief
that honey crystallizes because it is adulterated
with sugar. To remain liquid however, many
honeys require special processing (see 2.12.1).
Slow crystallizing honeys can be sold without
further processing or may be used, if lightly
coloured, to pour around bottled chunks of
comb honey or fruits and nuts. Light coloured
honeys are particularly suitable for sale
as comb honey in special clear packages (see
Figure 2.16 a). But any kind of honey can
be sold as comb honey as long as the combs
are evenly sealed and relatively new, i.e.
with white or light yellow wax. In blending
different honeys, attention has to be paid
to the final ratio of glucose to fructose
and the possible need for additional heat
treatments Fast and slow crystallizing honeys
low in moisture content can be processed
to prolong their liquid state (see section
2.12.1) or can be forced to crystallize under
controlled conditions to achieve a soft and
uniform consistency (see section 2.12.2).
Uniformly crystallized honey is attractive
both visually and for its convenience of
use. It is also less likely to ferment than
badly crystallized or semi-crystallized honeys
(see Figure 2.3). Different storage temperatures
in different climates, among other factors
influence the crystallization and speed of
re-liquefaction of honeys. Stored above 25°C, most honeys remain liquid or reliquify
slowly, but lose much of their aroma in just
a few months
2.5.2 As a food ingredient
The traditional use of honey in food preparations
has been substituted in most cases by sugar
and more recently by various sugar syrups
derived from starches. These exhibit similar
composition and characteristics, but at a
much reduced cost. At the same time, as part
of the increasing appreciation of more natural
products in many countries, honey has been
"rediscovered" as a valuable food
and therefore confers, also as an ingredient,
an enhanced market value to the end product.
Many honey containing industrial products
which were developed in the last decades,
but which did not have the expected success,
are currently being remarketed more successfully.
Outside of the thousands of "home-made"
recipes in each cultural tradition, honey
is largely used on a small scale as well
as at an industrial level in baked products,
confectionary, candy, marmalades, jams, spreads,
breakfast cereals, beverages, milk products
and many preserved products. In particular,
the relatively new industry of "natural",
health and biological products uses honey
abundantly as the sweetener of first choice,
together with non-refined sugars in substitution
of refined sucrose (cane and beet sugar).
In fact, honey can substitute all or part
of the normal sugar in most products (see
2.12.11). Limitations are presented on one
side by costs and handling characteristics
and on the other by the natural variations
in honey characteristics which change the
end product, make it more variable and require
more frequent adjustments in the industrial
formulations (recipes).
Recipe books for home use of honey have been
published in many languages. Many of these
recipes can also be adapted for artisanal
and small scale production. Aside from the
occasional information in special trade books
or journals, information or recipes about
large-scale uses of honey are difficult to
find. One French text on industrial food
production with honey is a good source (Paillon,
1960). Otherwise the National Honey Board
of the USA (see Annex 2) is able to provide
information and technical assistance including
tips on promotion and marketing, to small
and large industrial users of honey.
To baked products, aside from the already mentioned consumer
appeal, honey confers several other advantages
such as a particular soft, spongy (springy)
consistency which persists longer. Products
that contain honey also dry out more slowly
and have a lesser tendency to crack. These
properties are due to the hygroscopicity
of honey, a trait honey has in common with
other sweeteners high in fructose, like acid-hydrolysed
corn syrup or other syrups made from starches
and fruit juices. Another advantage consists
of more uniform baking with a more evenly
browned crust at lower temperatures. These
characteristics too, are mostly due to the
fructose content. Yet another advantage is
an improved aroma, conferred by relatively
small percentages of honey (up to 6% by weight
of the flour) in sweet cakes, biscuits, breads
and similar products (see Figure 2.4). Since
most beneficial effects can be obtained with
relatively small quantities, the baking industry
prefers strong flavoured honeys thus maximizing
flavour for the lowest possible cost. On
the other hand not more than one third of
the sugar in a baking recipe should normally
be replaced by honey.
In confectionerv production, honey is still included in many
traditional products which are consumed locally
in considerable quantities but are also exported,
such as torrone from Italy, tur6n from Spain,
nougat from France and halvah from Turkey
and Greece. For the production of caramels
(bonbons) honey is used only in very small
quantities, since its hygroscopicity presents
a major disadvantage: it reduces the preservation
time and softens the caramels at the surface
causing them to stick together. Some caramels,
made with special machinery have a liquid
honey core. In gelatinous or gum products,
honey can be used in the same way as other
flavouring agents (aromas or fruit pulp).
The chocolate industry uses honey in only
a few products. One Swiss chocolate in particular,
in which honey is included in the form of
broken nougat, can be found worldwide.
In the breakfast cereal industry, honey is used either in its liquid
or in its dried and pulverized form, both
for better flavour and increased consumer
appeal. It can be mixed with cereal flakes
and dried fruits or applied as a component
of the sweetening and flavouring film which
covers the flakes. The dryness or hardness
of the cereal can be adjusted with the honey
content and the degree of drying. Some cereal
recipes are given in Chapter 3.
Numerous snack bars (candy bars) are marketed in which honey constitutes the binding and sweetening
agent. Other ingredients of the mixtures
can be dried fruits (like raisins, figs,
apples, apricots, prunes, dates, pineapple,
papaya, etc.), nuts and seeds (like hazelnuts,
walnuts, almonds, brazil nuts, pistachios,
ground nuts, cashew nuts, sesame seeds, sunflower
seeds, linseeds or coconut flakes), cereals
of all kinds (rolled, as flakes or in puffed
form) and possibly other ingredients such
as milk powder, pollen, cacao, carob and
aromas. The ingredients are chopped to various
sizes and mixed with the hot honey and sugar.
Depending on the composition and the degree
of heating of the sugars (including honey)
a more or less solid product is obtained
after cooling. Some can be cooled in moulds,
some be cut after cooling and others, which
remain soft, have to be layered between wafers
or biscuits and coated with chocolate. In
any case, all such products are fairly hygroscopic
and need to be packed with material impermeable
to moisture. A few recipes can be found in
Chapter 3 and section 2.12.6.
In the wide variety of spreads for bread, there are products in which honey
is either the major ingredient, such as "flavoured"
honeys, or in which it only substitutes for
sugar as in cream spreads and fruit preserves.
Flavoured honeys are usually marketed in
crystallized form as the addition of the
other ingredients speeds up the crystallization
anyhow. It is better to control the crystallization
and mixing rather than leaving it to chance
and having the other ingredients separate
from the liquid honey after a short time.
The ingredients are either mixed with the
honey at the same time as the seed crystals
or they are mixed after crystallization has
been completed, to obtain a harder or softer
end product respectively. For further details
see recipes of creamed honey in section 2.12.2.
Sun-dried or freeze-dried fruits like raisins,
apricots or strawberries may be chopped and
nuts and seeds may be pureed and included
in the honey, as may be cacao, cream or milk
powders and even butter. In some cases the
product has to be stored in a refrigerator.
Separate attention needs to be devoted to honeys with added aromas or essences, be it fruit or other aromatic essences. Such
practices are, or at least have been, more
common in Eastern Europe where sometimes
the aromas, food colouring or even medicinal
drugs were fed to the bees in sugar syrup
and the "honey" extracted from
these colonies sold as "strawberry honey"
or "mint honey", etc. However,
they are not truly honey (see definition
in section 2.1). To the consumer they present
something very similar to natural honeys,
at least in appearance. Therefore, European
Union (EU) legislation does not allow commercialization
of these products under the name of honey.
Adding aromas to liquid or creamed honey
produced from natural sources is yet a different
approach compatible with European legislation,
if labelled accordingly, but of questionable
consumer appeal. This honey must be labelled
so it can be distinguished from unifloral
honeys.
|
Figure 2.4: Some honey-based bakery products
also showing granola (mijesli) bars.
|
In the preparation of marmalades and jams, honey can replace all or part of the sugars
used. The fruit and honey mixture is concentrated
by boiling or under vacuum (reduced pressure)
until a sugar concentration of at least 63
% is reached, which is sufficient for preservation.
The boiling time can be reduced by using
partially sun-dried fruits. Any reduction
of boiling time or temperature will improve
flavour and reduce caramelization. The last
two methods, boiling under reduced pressure
and using sun-dried fruits, preserve the
original flavours better. The use of sun-dried
fruit also requires less fuel and 1e~~ expensive
equipment (see section 2.12.12). For these
types of preserves a refractometer is helpful
to determine the final sugar concentration.
Another alternative is the preparation of
"semi-preserves", i.e. those which
use less sugar (honey) and boiling (30 minutes),
store well in their unopened (sterilized)
original containers, but once opened have
to be refrigerated or consumed within a few
days. The same procedures as under section
8.10.7 can be followed.
The quantity and ratio of honey and fruits
varies with the fruit and the choice of preserves.
Fresh fruits contain between 3 and 20% of
sugar and honey contains approximately 80%
thus the approximate requirements can be
calculated. To obtain a suitable consistency
in those preserves with a relatively low
sugar content, pectin is added at a rate
of 0.1 to 0.2%. Lemon juice or citric and
tartaric acid may have to be added to make
the mixture sufficiently acidic for the pectin
to gel. For home and artisanal use of honey
in marmalades, jellies and fruit syrups,
there is a multitude of family recipes, but
industrial use of honey in preserves remains
very limited, probably because of economic
considerations. A simple honey jelly made
from a mixture of honey, pectin and water
is presented in section 2.12.13.
In Italy, a product type with whole dried fruits or nuts in honey, or honey with dried fruits and nuts,
is quite popular (see Figure 2.5). Clear jars, preferably glass, are partially
filled with low moisture, slow crystallizing,
light coloured honey and then filled with
dried fruits or nuts. If dried fruits with
a relatively high water content like pineapple,
chestnut, apricots and figs are added, fermentation
may occur and the final moisture content
of such honeys has to be closely observed
or the honey be replaced (see section 2.12.8).
|
Figure 2.5 : Hazel nuts packed in liquid
honey.
|
The use of honey mixed with milk or milk products is a very common home remedy against colds
and infections of the throat. In the industrial
sector some non-medicinal honey-milk products
exist, such as pasteurized and homogenized
milk sweetened with honey for long-term storage.
One particular honey-milk is prepared with
dried milk powder plus 25 % honey and 10%
glucose (Spo~ttel, 1950). Another product is yoghurt with honey (Spanish
Dairy Corp., 1975). In South America dulce de leche (sweet milk)
is almost as essential to the Argentinean
diet as meat, and is an extremely popular
spread. Though mostly prepared with other
sugars, honey makes for a much richer flavour
(see section 2.12.7). In yoghurt, honey is
used as a sweetener or like other flavourings
and is mixed at the rate of 10 to 15 % either
before or after fermentation. Alternatively,
it may be left separately at the bottom of
the container. The mixing causes a slight
loss of viscosity of the yoghurt, which can
be corrected by adding skimmed milk solids
(Brown and Kosikowski, 1970). One of the
Italian industry leaders in this sector produces
a yoghurt with orange blossom honey, the
aroma of which blends very well with the
yoghurt. In special combination packages
a fruit granola mix is packed above a honey-sweetened
yoghurt (Colangelo, 1980).
Adding honey to ice creams has been suggested several times, but at
least in Italy, ice creams sweetened with
honey have never had much commercial success,
probably due to the fact that these ice creams
melt more easily and at lower temperatures
than those made with sugar. This causes problems
in distribution and open sales presentations
together with other sugar-based ice creams.
In other countries, but particularly when
ice cream is sold in pre-packaged individual
portions or larger 0.5 to 2 litre containers,
honey-based ice creams are marketed successfully.
The addition of more than 7.5 % honey softens
the ice cream significantly, due to its lower
freezing point.
In the industrial non-alcoholic beverage industry, the use of honey is relatively
recent and is expanding. The reasons can
be found in a wider distribution of "functional"
drinks such as health orientated, strengthening
or replenishing isotonic drinks. Honey drinks
are most frequently mixed with lemon juice
for a pleasant sweet and sour taste, but
other fruit flavourings such as apple juice
are often added. In 1990, over 40 new honey
drinks were introduced in Japan, of which
one (on a honey and lemon juice base) was
introduced by the Coca-Cola Bottling Co.
of Tokyo (PRC, 1990). In many fruit juices too, honey is
added as a flavouring and sweetener. In apple
juice it is also used to clarify the fresh
juice (Lee and Kime, 1984) by adding 4% of
a solution containing equal proportions of
honey and water (Wakayama and Lee, 1987).
Ice tea can be flavoured and clarified with
the addition of honey and lemon juice.
These new beverages take advantage of a special
ultrafiltration process. This filtration
through special membranes eliminates any
impurities, microscopic granules (pollen)
microorganisms and even macromolecules such
as proteins, which might otherwise produce
turbidity or flocculation in clear beverages.
Such ultrafiltered honey loses some of its
flavour and colour but gains in consistency,
which is highly appreciated by food processors
for its lower production cost. This ultrafiltration
may soon find wider application not only
in the beverage industry, but also in the
dairy, cosmetic and pharmaceutical industries
(Lagrange, 1991).
For inclusion in some recipes, honey is also
dried or dehydrated by various industrial techniques (Olstrom,
1983), usually some type of vacuum or spray
drying. However, dried honey is even more
hygroscopic and needs to be stabilized by
mixing with other powders such as starches,
flours or other non-hygroscopic sugars, which
are compatible with the final recipe. The
percentage of stabilizers is in general around
55 % but may vary from 20 to 70% in case
of, for example, porous maltitol powder (Ebisu
et al., 1988). The powdered honey is used
in dry mixes for cakes, breads and drinks
or energy health powders and avoids the need
to handle any liquid or sticky honey. Other
applications are in cosmetics and alcoholic
beverages, where additional water content
is not desired or where handling of liquids
increases production cost. Lupke (1980) discusses
the use of dried honey in baked goods in
Germany. Yener et al. (1987) describes different
production techniques used in Turkey for
the stabilized dry honey powder. Crane (1990)
reports granular dried honey as reducing
shrinkage of meat products by 19% and production
of an additive-free dried honey powder has
been mentioned in the Speedy Bee (1988).
Honey is also used in the manufacturing of
sauces, the preparation of canned meat and honey
cured (cooked) hams. Distilled alcoholic
beverages incorporate honey as a flavouring
agent after distillation, as for example
Benedictine in France, Drambuie in Scotland,
Irish Mist in Ireland, Grappa al Miele in
Italy, Krupnik in Poland, Barenfang in Germany
and many others.
For all the mentioned preparations, most
of all for those with a high honey content,
the quality and flavour of that honey are
important. Any recipe will have to be adapted
to the type of honey available and most of
all to its water content, which determines
the cooking or baking times in pastries and
preserves, and the appearance, consistency
and stability of other products.
2.5.3 As an ingredient in medicine-like products
The medicinal use of honey is probably its
most widely known use, but such uses do not
require special preparations. If not used
straight, it is mixed at home with other
liquids such as hot milk, teas or other infusions,
wine and other alcoholic beverages. The pharmacopoeias
of many countries describe a honey-based
preparation which can be prepared by pharmacists
(honey rose water) which is used for topical
application in infected throats and various
ulcers of the mouth (see 2.12.15).
More common is the use of honey in herbal
and other traditional extracts. If the extract
is presented in the form of a syrup, the
preparations need to be sterilized with heat
before or after the addition of the active
ingredients, or a preservative like potassium
sorbate or alcohol needs to be added. Sometimes
fermented honey syrups are used as a base.
These fermented syrups are made by adding
yeasts to a mix that contains a much higher
ratio of sugar to water (1:1) than is used
for honey wines, mead or beer (see next section).
Plant extracts are added after fermentation
and clarification.
The addition of honey to herbal extracts
and also prior to fermentation (as described
above) is commonly practised in ayurvedic
medicine as mentioned in 2.4.1. Traditional
African medicinal extracts are also mixed
with honey and probably not only because
they are easier to take that way. In Europe,
many traditional formulations are also known
and some were even recommended by Hippocrates
(Adams, 1939).
Honey is also a fundamental ingredient in
some medicinal wines and vinegars. In one
case herbs are crushed and immersed for 10
to 30 days in the wine, to which some alcohol
may be added in order to improve the extraction
and preservation. The liquid obtained needs
to be filtered and pasteurized; honey is
then added.
Contents - Previous - Next
|
|