Shropshire Polyfloral Honey

Shropshire Polyfloral Honey Local unadulterated, fine filtered natural honey for sale from near Shrewsbury. Member of SBKA, BBKA.

See SBKA website. Visit Nobold Lane. Excellent.
26/01/2026

See SBKA website. Visit Nobold Lane. Excellent.

Please use our BBKA map to find branches and members who can help you on your way to becoming a beekeeper.

10/01/2026

🍯The Science Behind Honey’s Eternal Shelf Life: Modern archeologists, excavating ancient Egyptian tombs, have often found something unexpected amongst the tombs’ artifacts: pots of honey, thousands of years old, and yet still preserved. Through millennia, the archeologists discover, the food remains unspoiled, an unmistakable testament to the eternal shelf-life of honey.

There are a few other examples of foods that keep–indefinitely–in their raw state: salt, sugar, dried rice are a few. But there’s something about honey; it can remain preserved in a completely edible form, and while you wouldn’t want to chow down on raw rice or straight salt, one could ostensibly dip into a thousand year old jar of honey and enjoy it, without preparation, as if it were a day old. Moreover, honey’s longevity lends it other properties–mainly medicinal–that other resilient foods don’t have. Which raises the question–what exactly makes honey such a special food?

The answer is as complex as honey’s flavor–you don’t get a food source with no expiration date without a whole slew of factors working in perfect harmony. The first comes from the chemical make-up of honey itself. Honey is, first and foremost, a sugar. Sugars are hygroscopic, a term that means they contain very little water in their natural state but can readily suck in moisture if left unsealed. As Amina Harris, executive director of the Honey and Pollination Center at the Robert Mondavi Institute at Univeristy of California, Davis explains, “Honey in its natural form is very low moisture. Very few bacteria or microorganisms can survive in an environment like that, they just die. They’re smothered by it, essentially.” What Harris points out represents an important feature of honey’s longevity: for honey to spoil, there needs to be something inside of it that can spoil. With such an inhospitable environment, organisms can’t survive long enough within the jar of honey to have the chance to spoil.

Honey is also naturally extremely acidic. “It has a pH that falls between 3 and 4.5, approximately, and that acid will kill off almost anything that wants to grow there,” Harris explains. So bacteria and spoil-ready organisms must look elsewhere for a home–the life expectancy inside of honey is just too low.

But honey isn’t the only hygroscopic food source out there. Molasses, for example, which comes from the byproduct of cane sugar, is extremely hygroscopic, and is acidic, though less so than honey (molasses has a pH of around 5.5). And yet–although it may take a long time, as the sugar cane product has a longer shelf-life than fresh produce, eventually molasses will spoil. J⭐️

Image Source:
pexels.com

Source/Read More:
https://www.smithsonianmag.com/science-nature/the-science-behind-honeys-eternal-shelf-life-1218690/

03/01/2026

If your desire is similar, share this desire...

29/12/2025
I gave a hugely enjoyable TALK about beekeeping to the Weeds United garden group at Alberbury village Hall recently. "De...
28/11/2025

I gave a hugely enjoyable TALK about beekeeping to the Weeds United garden group at Alberbury village Hall recently.

"Delighted and grateful for your talk to us at Weeds last night. I get immediate feedback at the serving of the teas and everyone throughly enjoyed the evening.
An excellent evening’s entertainment which proved highly informative - thank you!"

I still have lots of local honey ready for sale, and I have REDUCED the price to £5 per 340 g jar for this Christmas period. Local delivery (Atcham) possible. Text me on 07506388302.

Paul

18/11/2025

Lessons from the Beehive
Why Honey Crystallizes 🐝🍯

Ever opened a jar of honey and thought, “Uh oh… why is it turning solid?”
Good news, friend — your honey isn’t going bad… it’s honestly just being honey!

✨ Straight from the hive:
Crystallization is 100% natural. Heres the thing though
Raw, filtered, local, imported, fancy, store-brand — ALL honey can crystallize over time. It’s simply part of honey’s natural chemistry.

But let’s bust a couple myths…
🚫 It’s NOT true that only raw honey crystallizes.
🚫 It’s NOT true that all honey crystallizes at the same speed.

Some nectars crystallize super fast… some take years… and a few hardly crystallize at all. It all depends on the plant the bees visited and the honey’s natural sugar makeup.

💡 What affects crystallization?
• Glucose-to-fructose ratio
• Natural particles (pollen, wax, propolis bits)
• Room temperature
• Age of the honey
• Storage conditions

👇 Beekeeper Secret:
Raw, unfiltered honey (like ours!) usually crystallizes faster because it still contains pollen and tiny wax particles — the good stuff. These act like “starter spots” where crystals begin to form.

Processed honey is heated and filtered, so it generally crystallizes slower…
but heating destroys enzymes, aroma, and beneficial nutrients.

⚖️ And here’s the BIG truth:
Fast crystallizing honey isn’t “better,” and slow crystallizing honey isn’t “better” either.
Some nectar sources naturally crystallize quickly — like sunflower, clover, cotton, mustard, and canola. Some crystallize so fast the beekeeper can barely extract it! Others stay liquid much longer.

🔬 Simple Honey Science:
• Honey is a supersaturated sugar solution.
• Glucose wants to crystallize — fructose resists it.
• More glucose = quicker crystals.
• Temperatures around 55°F speed up crystallization.
• Crystallization does NOT mean honey is raw.
• Crystallization absolutely does NOT mean honey is spoiled.

💛 Beekeeper Wisdom:
Crystallized honey is STILL pure, safe, delicious, and full of flavor.
Spread it… stir it… or gently warm the jar in a bowl of warm water to make it liquid again.
(Just skip the microwave — it damages those precious natural enzymes!)

Honey shifts with the seasons, the flowers, and the weather — just like the bees themselves. And that’s part of the magic. 🍯✨
Crystallization is natural… but it doesn’t determine whether honey is raw.

❓ Has your honey ever crystallized? Do you love it creamy or do you warm it back to liquid?

16/11/2025
Cross Houses Christmas Fair TODAY 10.30 am onwards. My honey is for sale…£5 per 340g jar. Reduced price due to bumper ha...
16/11/2025

Cross Houses Christmas Fair TODAY 10.30 am onwards. My honey is for sale…£5 per 340g jar. Reduced price due to bumper harvest! Both runny and set honey. Local is best!

Address

11 St Eatas Lane
Atcham
SY56QA

Telephone

+447506388302

Website

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