Honey is an amazing substance – especially when you consider
how it is made by bees. It is a complex mixture of sugar, trace enzymes,
minerals, vitamins, and amino acids.
Honey has many health benefits when used in moderation (assuming you're
healthy).
Honey Production
Process
It takes about over 50,000 bees traveling up to 50,000 miles
and visiting up to 2 million flowers, to gather enough nectar to make one pound
of honey! Bees stores the nectar in their extra stomach where it mixes
with enzymes, and then the bees pass the nectar to another bee's mouth.
This process is
repeated until the nectar becomes digested and is then deposited into a
honeycomb where it becomes honey after the bees fan it with their wings to evaporate
some of the liquid it contains. The
bees then seal the honey comb with secretions from their abdomen. In this way honey can be stored almost indefinitely
as it is sealed away from air and water.
Honey is infused with many chemicals from the different
flowers bees visit which accounts for the extremely wide variation in color and
taste of different honeys collected in different regions.
Health Benefits of
Honey
Honey is excellent
cough medicine, and research has proven that honey works as well as
dextromethorphan, a common ingredient in over the counter cough medications.
Honey can treat
wounds and was commonly used to prevent and treat wound infections until
the advent of antibiotics. Today it is
being used again more and more as research shows it can be an extremely potent
and safe way to treat serious skin infections. One specific type of honey – Manuka Honey –
is specifically used for creating wound and burn dressings.
Manuka honey is made from the flowers of the Manuka bush,
and research have shown that Manuka honey is effective in combatting more than
200 clinical strains of bacteria, including anti-biotic resistance strains such
as:
◦ MRSA (methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus)
◦ MSSA (methicillin-sensitive Staphylococcus aureus)
◦ VRE (vancomycin-resistant enterococci)
Honey releases hydrogen peroxide through an enzymatic
process, which explains its general antiseptic qualities, but Manuka honey
contains and unknown unique factor that makes it far superior to other types of
honey when it comes to killing off bacteria.
Even so, research shows that any type of unprocessed honey
helps wounds and ulcers heal.
Honey Is Great for Your
Scalp: Honey diluted with a bit of warm water can significantly improve
seborrheic dermatitis, dandruff and itching.
Honey is a Great
Energy Booster: Honey is a great energy booster before a workout, and this
is particularly true for athletes.
Honey Can Safely
Dramatically Reduce Allergy Symptoms: Local honey, which contains a wide
variety of pollen from local plants, introduces a small amount of allergen into
your system. This can act like an allergy shot and gradually condition your
immune system to stop reacting to allergens.
Dosage is a teaspoon-full of locally produced honey per day,
starting a few months PRIOR to the pollen season, to allow your system to build
up immunity.
One study on local honey and allergy showed that, during
birch pollen season, compared to the control group, the patients using birch
pollen honey experienced:
◦ 60 percent reduction in symptoms
◦ Twice as many asymptomatic days
◦ 70 percent fewer days with severe symptoms
◦ 50 percent decrease in usage of antihistamines
Honey can Combat
Herpes
Honey helps fight herpes sores by:
• Drawing fluid away from the sores
• Suppresses microorganism growth
Honey may help fight
cancer by limiting certain cancer cell proliferation, inducing cancer cell
death and inhibiting tumor growth. It's been shown to lower the risk for cancer
of the skin, cervix, colon, prostate and breast, among others.
Honey has been shown
to have anxiety reducing, anti-depressant, anti-convulsant and anti-pain properties.
Using High Quality
Honey is Important!
The antibacterial activity in some honey is 100 times more
potent than in others, while processed refined honey will lack many of these
beneficial properties altogether. Most honey found in your grocery store is
probably highly processed.
The best honey is unprocessed, and a great source is locally
produced raw honey purchased directly from a beekeeper, farmers markets,
co-ops, and natural stores like Trader Joe's. When choosing honey, be sure it
is raw, unfiltered, and 100% pure, from a trusted source.
Honey Should Be
Consumed in Moderation
Honey is high in fructose. Each teaspoon of honey has nearly
four grams of fructose, which means it can be inappropriate for anyone with
diabetes and too much can make pre-existing insulin resistance worse.
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