Search Results - Honey

Honey

French honey from different floral sources, with visible differences in color and texture Honey is a sweet and viscous substance made by several species of bees, the best-known of which are honey bees. Honey is made and stored to nourish bee colonies. Bees produce honey by gathering and then refining the sugary secretions of plants (primarily floral nectar) or the secretions of other insects, like the honeydew of aphids. This refinement takes place both within individual bees, through regurgitation and enzymatic activity, and during storage in the hive, through water evaporation that concentrates the honey's sugars until it is thick and viscous.

Honey bees stockpile honey in the hive. Within the hive is a structure made from wax called honeycomb. The honeycomb is made up of hundreds or thousands of hexagonal cells, into which the bees regurgitate honey for storage. Other honey-producing species of bee store the substance in different structures, such as the pots made of wax and resin used by the stingless bee.

Honey for human consumption is collected from wild bee colonies, or from the hives of domesticated bees. The honey produced by honey bees is the most familiar to humans, thanks to its worldwide commercial production and availability. The husbandry of bees is known as beekeeping or apiculture, with the cultivation of stingless bees usually referred to as meliponiculture.

Honey is sweet because of its high concentrations of the monosaccharides fructose and glucose. It has about the same relative sweetness as sucrose (table sugar). One standard tablespoon (14 mL) of honey provides around of food energy. It has attractive chemical properties for baking and a distinctive flavor when used as a sweetener. Due to honey's high sugar concentration and acidic pH level many microorganisms cannot grow in it and, when properly stored, honey therefore does not spoil. Samples of honey discovered in archaeological contexts have proven edible even after millennia.

Honey use and production has a long and varied history, with its beginnings in prehistoric times. Several cave paintings in Cuevas de la Araña in Spain depict humans foraging for honey at least 8,000 years ago. While ''Apis mellifera'' is an Old World insect, large-scale meliponiculture of New World stingless bees has been practiced by Mayans since pre-Columbian times. Provided by Wikipedia
Refine Results
  1. 1
    by Honey, Peter
    Published 1980
    Book
  2. 2
    by Honey, Rex
    Published 1978
    Book
  3. 3
    by Honey, G.
    Published 1984
    Book
  4. 4
    by Honey, Martha
    Published 1994
    Book
  5. 5
    by Zisman, Honey
    Published 1994
    Book
  6. 6
    by Honey, Martha
    Published 1999
    Book
  7. 7
  8. 8
    by Honey, G.
    Published 2000
    Book
  9. 9
  10. 10
    by Honey, G.
    Published 2003
    Connect to the full text of this electronic book
    eBook
  11. 11
    by Honey, G.
    Published 2001
    Connect to the full text of this electronic book
    eBook
  12. 12
    by Honey, Martha
    Published 1985
    Book
  13. 13
    by Honey, Tom
    Published 2005
    Book
  14. 14
    by Honey, G.
    Published 2007
    Book
  15. 15
  16. 16
    by Honey, G.
    Published 2003
    Connect to the full text of this electronic book
    eBook
  17. 17
    by Honey, Martha
    Published 2009
    Get full text
    Government Document eBook
  18. 18
    by Fisher, Honey
    Published 1996
    Connect to this streaming video (Alexander Street Press)
    Video
  19. 19
    by Honey, Gerard
    Published 2003
    Connect to this electronic resource
    eBook
  20. 20
    by Fisher, Honey
    Published 1996
    Connect to this streaming video (Alexander Street Press)
    Video