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We asked a beekeeper how to get the best from your honey

As Rosh Hashanah approaches, beekeeper and recipe writer Amy Newsome shares how to have the sweetest new year

September 14, 2023 15:41
Honey 1 1649
Beekeeper Amy Newsome
4 min read

Great honey cake needs high-quality honey. “You’ve got to start with something really good if you want the end result to be brilliant,” says Amy Newsome, author of Honey: Recipes from a Beekeeper’s Kitchen, which was published this summer.

It’s all about the flavour says Newsome, a beekeeper and garden designer. “Cheaper blended honey will have been produced using a mixture of honey from all over the world by manufacturers aiming for one consistent flavour.” Avoid honey with labels that don’t say where they are from or are from a blend of EU and non-EU honey, she says.

Heat degrades the golden nectar’s flavours — ultimately reducing it to something akin to golden syrup. If honey is heated above a certain temperature during processing, it cannot be labelled as honey.

Her advice is to buy the best honey you can afford — a decent jar made from one type of flower such as orange blossom or lavender that tells you exactly where it’s from. This honey starts out with character and a range of floral aromas. “When you use that good honey in cooking, you’re much more likely to end up with something that still has that floral flavour.”

Like olive oil, wine and coffee, honey varies with terroir — the landscape and climate of the area in which it’s from and where the bees have foraged. And wouldn’t you want your New Year’s bake to be as full of flavour as possible?

Which honeys are best for apple dipping? Seek out artisan producers says Newsome: “Find whatever honey is local to you and start from there. Everyone has a local beekeeper, even in the centre of London.

“Go for a blossom honey as opposed to a tree or forest honey as they tend to be pretty mild and heavy on the floral aromas. Almost all honey is blossom honey in the sense that bees are feeding on nectar from flowers to make it.

Plant lavender to feed the bees[Missing Credit]

This recipe first appeared in the JC on September 14 2023

Amy is the author of Honey: Recipes from a Beekeeper’s Kitchen
 

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