unpasteurized honey vs pasteurized
becca_maee
Posts: 144 Member
I accidentally got the unpasteurized type today...is it safe? Do you have to warm it or anything. Lol I'm paranoid when It comes to food.
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And online I just see we're it has pollen and stuff in it an could have stuff that causes botulism but usually not in adults so??0
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It actually has nutrients in it.0
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There is pasteurised honey? Does that not kill the honey? All I know you should never give honey to infants under a year, and I've recently learnt that having a teaspoon of locally produced honey in winter, will help aleviate the symptoms of hay fever the next spring, as those bees make it from the pollen you are so sensitive from. I am going to do that next fall and winter. If it does not help, it will not hurt either. Honey actually has medicinal qualities, ancient folks used it a lot against a number of things. (we visited a bee exposition a while ago)0
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the honey I get always comes in a little plastic bear
best case scenario, you eat it and it tastes good. worst case, you get botulism, I guess. wouldn't sweat it tbh0 -
My brother farms with bees and according to him pasteurization kills off everything that is good in honey. You may as well have sugar syrup instead.0
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honey only has trace amounts of protein, vitamins, and minerals.
it is sugar syrup, regardless of processing. someone who sells honey would tell you otherwise.0 -
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If there is botulinum toxin in the honey, you'll know because pressurization from the bacteria growing will occur in the jar (old tinned food with botulinum toxin in it would swell and distort, which is how people knew not to eat it back in the day).
Other than that, did you know that honey is one of the few foods that never spoils? Unpasteurised in my opinion is fine.the honey I get always comes in a little plastic bear
best case scenario, you eat it and it tastes good. worst case, you get botulism, I guess. wouldn't sweat it tbh
If you get botulism poisoning, there's a very high chance it can kill you. There's a reason why botox injections make your face swell and inhibits nervous control.0 -
mangrothian wrote: »If there is botulinum toxin in the honey, you'll know because pressurization from the bacteria growing will occur in the jar (old tinned food with botulinum toxin in it would swell and distort, which is how people knew not to eat it back in the day).
Other than that, did you know that honey is one of the few foods that never spoils? Unpasteurised in my opinion is fine.the honey I get always comes in a little plastic bear
best case scenario, you eat it and it tastes good. worst case, you get botulism, I guess. wouldn't sweat it tbh
If you get botulism poisoning, there's a very high chance it can kill you. There's a reason why botox injections make your face swell and inhibits nervous control.
So if it had it the bottle would be swole? I mean it's not a common thing for it to have it in there though right?
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Oh Nevermind just re read where you already answered my question before I even asked lol0
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