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♥ Lily ♥
03-17-2017, 09:46 PM
10 Health Benefits of Honey
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Discover the health benefits of one of the oldest sweeteners on earth, plus some interesting trivia, some great recipes and a few cautions.

Bees swallow, digest and regurgitate nectar to make honey; this nectar contains almost 600 compounds. We need our bees, so let’s do everything we can to save them and keep them here on this earth.


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Honey is so good we have included it in our list of powerfoods that should be in your kitchen right now.


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Health Benefits of Honey

1. Prevent cancer and heart disease
Honey contains flavonoids, antioxidants which help reduce the risk of some cancers and heart disease.

2. Reduce ulcers and other gastrointestinal disorders
Recent research shows that honey treatment may help disorders such as ulcers and bacterial gastroenteritis. This may be related to the 3rd benefit.

3. Anti-bacterial, anti-fungal, anti-fungal
“All honey is antibacterial, because the bees add an enzyme that makes hydrogen peroxide,” said Peter Molan, director of the Honey Research Unit at the University of Waikato in New Zealand.

4. Increase athletic performance
Ancient Olympic athletes would eat honey and dried figs to enhance their performance. This has now been verified with modern studies, showing that it is superior in maintaining glycogen levels and improving recovery time than other sweeteners.

5. Reduce cough and throat irritation
Honey helps with coughs, particularly buckwheat honey. In a study of 105 children, a single dose of buckwheat honey was just as effective as a single dose of dextromethorphan in relieving nocturnal cough and allowing proper sleep.


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6. Balance the 5 elements
Honey has been used in ayurvedic medicine in India for at least 4000 years and is considered to affect all three of the body’s primitive material imbalances positively. It is also said to be useful useful in improving eyesight, weight loss, curing impotence and premature ejaculation, urinary tract disorders, bronchial asthma, diarrhea, and nausea.

Honey is referred as “Yogavahi” since it has a quality of penetrating the deepest tissues of the body. When honey is used with other herbal preparations, it enhances the medicinal qualities of those preparations and also helps them to reach the deeper tissues.

7. Blood sugar regulation
Even though honey contains simple sugars, it is NOT the same as white sugar or artificial sweeteners. Its exact combination of fructose and glucose actually helps the body regulate blood sugar levels. Some honeys have a low hypoglycemic index, so they don’t jolt your blood sugar. Watch this video Sweetener Comparison where I compare stevia, brown rice syrup, honey, molasses and agave, and discuss the strengths and weaknesses of each.

8. Heal wounds and burns
External application of honey has been shown to be as effective as conventional treatment with silver sulfadiazine. It is speculated that the drying effect of the simple sugars and honey’s antibacterial nature combine to create this effect. Studies have shown honey to be very successful in healing wounds.

9. Probiotic
Some varieties of honey possess large amounts of friendly bacteria. This includes up to 6 species of lactobacilli and 4 species of bifidobacteria. This may explain many of the “mysterious therapeutic properties of honey.”

10. Strengthen the immune system
Manuka Honey has been found to stimulate the production of immune cells according to a study at the School of Medicine, Cardiff University, UK.

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Extra!

For Beautiful skin

Its anti-bacterial qualities are particularly useful for the skin, and, when used with the other ingredients, can also be moisturizing and nourishing!

Different honeys have different flavonoid profiles, depending on the floral source of the nectar. The most beneficial honeys for the body are Manuka and buckwheat.

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Types of Honey

Manuka honey strengthens the immune system. The Kiva Certified UMF 15+ – Raw Manuka Honey 15+ is lab-certified to UMF 15+ standard and is raw. This is a genuine Manuka Honey harvested from the remote hills, forest, and coastal areas of New Zealand.

Buckwheat is as a healthier alternative to cough syrup and good for the immune system.

Wildflower – Topanga Quality Wildflower Honey is raw, unfiltered and unpasturized. Kosher too.

Alfalfa – Stockin’s Unheated and Unfiltered Raw Alfalfa Honey is made in Saskatechewan, Canada from Alfalfa Blossoms.

Black Locust has the lowest glycemic index (32) of all of the honeys.

Raw Locust Honey by the Beekeeper’s Daughter is light, clean, and very aromatic and floral.

Blueberry

Orange Blossom

Clover – Uncle Henry’s Honey was voted best tasting raw honey by honey lovers and is from the purest wildflower fields of Canada.

There are at least 40 types – each one has distinctive taste and unique properties.

Darker honey tends to have higher antioxidant levels.

Monofloral honey (honey from a single plant species) usually has the lowest glycemic index (GI). For example, locust honey from the Black Locust tree has a GI of 32. Clover honey, which is used commercially, has the highest glycemic index at 69.

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Honey Suggestions

If you want to get the goodness from your honey, make sure it is pure and raw.
Raw honey contains vitamins, minerals and enzymes not present in refined honey.

Honey Cautions


Best not to feed to infants. Spores of Clostridium botulinum have been found in a small percentage of honey in North America. This is not dangerous to adults and older children, but infants can have a serious reaction of illness in the first year. Do not add honey to baby food or use as a soother to quiet a fussy or colicky baby. Most Canadian honey is not contaminated with the bacteria causing infant botulism, but it’s still best not to take the chance.
“Do not let babies eat honey,” states foodsafety.gov, a web site of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

Honey is a sugar, so do not eat jars full of it if you value your good health and want to maintain a healthy weight. It has a high caloric value and will put you on a sugar high and low.



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To cook with honey or not: There is some controversy about cooking with honey, although I cannot substantiate it from all of my research about honey.

“…when honey is heated above 108 degrees Fahrenheit, it becomes transformed into a glue-like substance that is extremely difficult to digest. This substance is considered a toxin (ama), since it adheres to the tissues of the body and is very difficult to remove.” ~ quote from the Ayurveda Wellness Center

That said, I am not convinced that we should not cook with honey, although I am not using it in most of my cooked recipes until I get to the bottom of this.

http://www.realfoodforlife.com/health-benefits-of-honey/


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Tschaikisten
03-17-2017, 09:48 PM
Everything is true but, where western people (for example you) buying honey? In markets? It's everything but not honey...

Anthropos
03-17-2017, 10:09 PM
Everything is true but, where western people (for example you) buying honey? In markets? It's everything but not honey...

There are several honey-makers or bee-culturers in my area... don't know about the UK but I'm not supposing they don't make honey. I don't consider myself "Western", false dichotomy IMO, but I guess you're thinking of me as well.

Tschaikisten
03-17-2017, 10:13 PM
There are several honey-makers or bee-culturers in my area... don't know about the UK but I'm not supposing they don't make honey. I don't consider myself "Western", false dichotomy IMO, but I guess you're thinking of me as well.

:thumb001:
I mean generally western Europe, USA, Australia, Scandinavia...that's what we call ''west'' :).

UkrainianGirl
03-17-2017, 10:16 PM
I have been cutting down on using sugar in my tea and coffee. Lately been drinking tea and coffee without it to the point of seeing no difference now yay. Anyway honey is sweeter than sugar so big no no for me. Plus I don't like the taste of it. Just wayyyy too sweet. So when I ever did have or do have honey it is veryyyy little.

Ylla
03-17-2017, 10:18 PM
Number 5: Mix honey and chamomile tea it helps for throat irritation.

Anthropos
03-17-2017, 10:19 PM
:thumb001:
I mean generally western Europe, USA, Australia, Scandinavia...that's what we call ''west'' :).

The thread is about honey.

Shah-Jehan
03-17-2017, 10:20 PM
In my culture, they feed honey to babies after they're born, so that their "speech is as sweet as honey".

Tschaikisten
03-17-2017, 10:20 PM
The thread is about honey.

You started :p
Brb. :)

Anthropos
03-17-2017, 10:22 PM
You started :p
Brb. :)

No. My post was about honey. Yours aren't.

MsSPF
03-17-2017, 10:30 PM
I put honey in my tea, honey on my face, take a drink of hot milk + honey to heal sore throat...

Thyme honey is extremely tasteful, I bought one jar in Morocco 2 years ago, one of the best honey I ever tasted

https://68.media.tumblr.com/25f37eca0b3a7103ec406f27ac7f5572/tumblr_ohluztyfIa1vzsanuo1_500.gif

♥ Lily ♥
03-17-2017, 10:31 PM
Everything is true but, where western people (for example you) buying honey? In markets? It's everything but not honey...

Honey is freshly produced from the four beehives on the rooftop on top of London's Fortum and Mason store, where jars of the freshly-made honey are sold inside the famous department store.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fkpq4hP0syI

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fortnum_%26_Mason

(London's luxurious Fortnum and Mason store, is renowned for its famous clock where two classic large figurine dolls of Mr. Fortnum and Mr. Mason appear from inside the clock and bow and greet each other at certain times of the hour outside of the historic store before returning back into the clock. The store is frequently visited by the Queen and members of the Royal family. It's dubbed as 'the quintessential English store' and 'the most luxurious department store in the world, since 1707,' and provides a treasure trove of hampers, the finest teas, hand-made chocolates using a 300 year old traditional recipe inside the store, and sells the worlds finest and rarest beauty and fragance products, in addition to their ice-cream parlour and selection of fine restaurants with pianists, etc.)

I bought my edible scorpions and edible ants from Fortnum and Mason too. I love their honey and silk scarves and fine teas that you can find inside that beautiful store, as well as the range of exotic herbal teas found inside the Japanese Tea Shop in London's Covent Garden.

So next time you're in London's Piccadilly, you might want to try the honies available inside F&M.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=idYgzMUZFb4

♥ Lily ♥
03-17-2017, 10:37 PM
Number 5: Mix honey and chamomile tea it helps for throat irritation.

I've always used honey and ginger tea to soothe a sore throat or for a cough or cold... and chamomile herbal tea to help me to relax before sleep.

I never buy or ever use any sugar or salt as there's enough hidden sugars and salts already present in natural foods. I only use a small amount of dark honey in herbal teas, and either vanilla pods, tabasco, garlic, tomatoes, onions, black pepper, or/and herbs to garnish and flavour various meals with.

I like a teaspoon of honey drizzled on top of my Scottish porridge oats for breakfast, (oats have the highest levels of silica found in natural foods, which is an often forgotten precious mineral that's essential for all living species to exist - plus silica is great for the hair and nails, and oats keeps cholesterol levels low.) I love adding cinnamon and nutmeg to porridge oats too. I let the porridge oats cool a bit before squeezing some honey from a squeezable container over the top of the oats.

Sometimes I like honey drizzled over wholemeal toast with melted banana slices. Herbal tea without honey added to it tastes bland to me. I like a few drops of honey in peppermint tea too.

I've never ever used honey on my hair on skin due to its extremely sticky texture - although I've heard that it's supposed to be beneficial for put onto the skin and hair, but I love using natural distilled organic rosewater on my skin as a natural skin toner each morning and evening.

http://www.theapricity.com/forum/showthread.php?150278-The-Benefits-of-Rose-Water-a-Natural-Beauty-Product-and-a-Natural-Remedy

Lek
03-17-2017, 10:49 PM
I put honey in my tea, honey on my face, take a drink of hot milk + honey to heal sore throat...

Thyme honey is extremely tasteful, I bought one jar in Morocco 2 years ago, one of the best honey I ever tasted

https://68.media.tumblr.com/25f37eca0b3a7103ec406f27ac7f5572/tumblr_ohluztyfIa1vzsanuo1_500.gif

I bathed in honey, now I'm gonna live forever.

♥ Lily ♥
03-17-2017, 11:16 PM
I also love delicious honey-roasted nuts... mmm!

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Dick
03-18-2017, 04:32 PM
Bee poo is good for you