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Honey is the beekeeper's main product. It is a complex association of many kinds of substances and defies definition. Mostly, of course, it is composed of sugars. Honey is a forgiving substance. It can take a lot of abuse during handling and still be a suitable product for the consumer. Microorganisms are usually killed when in honey. Only bacterial spores can withstand the large osmotic pressures the sweet produces.
A major problem with honey continues to be adulteration. Economic adulteration occurs when less expensive substances are added to honey to reduce the producer's costs. Other contamination can also occur for a number of reasons, including air and water pollution and use of antibiotics and/or pesticides in the beekeeping operation. Honey will not spoil, but can ferment if the moisture content is too high (over 18.6 percent). Thus, a major production problem is keeping moisture to a minimum, especially in tropical climates, like found in most of Florida.
The largest honey consumers are the European nations. Less than a pound per year is consumed by U.S. users. Promotion and marketing are, therefore, extremely important especially on the domestic scene. Fortunately, there exists the National Honey Board, which the beekeeping industry in its wisdom continues to support.
International Honey Trade Barriers, November 2000.
Study: Honey can help your workout, August 2000.
Honey and healing; not all honey may be therapeutic,
August 2000.
Honey not included in national organic standards,
April 2000.
HAACP and quality assurance, April 2000.
Organic acids, essential oils and taste, January
2000.
Are value-added products for you?, January 2000.
Is honey special enough? Rationale for NHB quality
assurance proposal, November 2000.
Economic
adulteration survey by Dr. Fairchild, funded by National Honey Board, October 1999.
Honey
House Sanitation: Importance to Food Manufacturing, June 1999.
Brazilian
honey shortage, April 1999.
Brazilian
honey shortage, April 1999.
Honey
loan program, April 1999.
Marketing
changes due to global situation examined, April 1999.
Honey
production and historical analysis, April 1999.
Honey
and grapefruit promotion connnection, January 1999.
Large-scale
adulteration: honey analog, December 1998.
Darker
honey is better because of antioxidants, September 1998.
Validation
of SCIRA for worldwide application in honey adulteration, September 1998.
Comments
on organic honey regulations, June 1998.
Economic
Adulteration Continues, October 1997
Economic
Adulteration Continues, October 1997
"Fresh
From Florida" Marketing Campaign, October 1997
Marketing
Honey as a Value-Added Product, October 1997.
Honey
Promotion: A Neglected Activity?, August 1997.
Organic
honey issues in Europe, May 1997.
Rising
honey prices as reported from Canada, June 1996.
Discussion
of what higher honey prices mean, May 1996.
1995
Honey production statistics, March 1996.
Florida
Department of Agriculture examines honey adulteration, March 1996.
Organic
honey issues discussed, February 1996.
Discussion
of honey quality in tropics; European honey quality concerns vs U.S., January 1996.
Further
discussion on small business food labelling, November 1994.
Discussion
of small business honey labelling, October 1994.
Honey
adulteration on the rise, August 1994.
Permitting
honey houses in Florida, regulations per Fl Statute 500.12, August 1994.
Honey
hotline of National Honey Board; honey research results, April 1994.
National
Honey Board defines honey, November 1993.
Too
frequent honey removal damages the crop? May 1993.
National
Honey Board releases new information on labelling honey, April 1993.
Antibiotic
properties of manuka honey in New Zealand, October 1992.
Export
hotline available; honey and other products, September 1992.
Pride
in honey program, National Honey Board, August 1992.
Managing
crises in beekeeping, August 1992.
Freshness of honey studied; European
concerns of honey quality in export market, June 1992.
Analysis
of organic labeling efforts in Florida, July 1991.
Spotlight
on Florida's Tropical Blossom Honey Co., July 1991.
Discussion
of Florida's Organic Food Law, June 1991.
Report
of honey farming operation in Florida. Never confirmed, November 1990.
Information
on Natinla Honey Board's crisis contamination program, September 1990.
Food
safety as a priority topic, September 1990.
Honey
contamination incident using fluvalinate, August 1990.
Sulpa
residues potential in honey, May 1990.
Honey
judging in Italy. Piana Prize, September 1989.
Discussion
on pricing your honey product, June 1989.
Discussion
of bar coding products (and bees?), May 1989.
Discussion
of honey exporting, October 1988.
A
technique to dry honey, September 1988.
Using
the Atago® honey refractometer, September 1988.
Historical
analysis of international honey marketing, July 1988.
© 1997 M.T. Sanford, "All Rights Reserved"