Did you ever wonder what the world used before sugar? It seems people used a natural sweetener – honey!
Honey is the predecessor of sugar. And in some places, it’s still the preferred sweetener – all because of its taste and texture. But did you know there are different types of honey in the market? Yes. Depending on the composition, source, color, processing methods, and therapeutic applications, honey comes in several varieties. Fascinating, isn’t it? Scroll down to know more on each honey variety. Trust me, you’d be amazed!
What Is Honey?
Honey is an impure and supersaturated sugar solution – a natural, original, sweetener. Its unique (though variable) combination of components makes honey a prized addition to the diet.
It has been used in food for at least 6000 years, mostly as a sweet source for much of the world’s population. The first written reference to honey, inscriptions on a Sumerian tablet dating back to 2100-2000 BC, mentions honey’s use as a drug and an ointment.
Honey is produced by six to eleven of the approximately 20,000 species of bees. The bees (most commonly, Apis mellifera) drink nectar from a flower and blend it multiple times with salivary enzymes (diastase and invertase) in their honey sacs.
The floral nectar is chemically transformed into honey when the complex sugars are enzymatically broken down into glucose and fructose, and excess water is evaporated.
Yes, nectar and honey are different! They differ based on their chemical composition. Nectar is an aqueous solution of sugars, amino acids, proteins, lipids, minerals, and other components, whereas, honey is more processed and rich.
What Are The Different Types Of Honey?
Based on its texture, honey can be either liquid, granulated, creamed, chunked, or can be of an unprocessed form (called comb honey).
Depending on the level of processing, honey can again be divided into raw and pasteurized forms. Raw honey is the crude form. It is directly extracted from the comb before being sent for any refinement. It has the highest therapeutic value. Pasteurized honey is obtained after heating and straining it to get rid of the bacterial or fungal contamination.
Another classification of honey is based on the nectar source. Honey produced by bees that drink nectar from a single species of flowers is unifloral honey. But if the nectar comes from more than one species of flowers, then it is multifloralhoney.
These floral types of honey are replete with active phytochemicals and differ from each another. Take a look at what each unifloral variety has.
1. Manuka Honey
Manuka honey is produced by bees that feed on the flowers of the New Zealand Manuka bush (Leptospermum scoparium). It contains high concentrations of methylglyoxal (MGO) and dihydroxyacetone, which may account for its antibacterial activity.
Applying manuka honey on wounds stimulates the formation of new blood cells and promotes the growth of fibroblast and epithelial cells. This honey has potential wound-healing (vulnerary) activity.
It is rich in vitamins B1, B2, B3, B5, and B6, and amino acids lysine, proline, arginine, and tyrosine. It also contains minerals like calcium, magnesium, copper, potassium, zinc, and sodium.
2. Alfalfa Honey
Coming from the alfalfa (Medicago sativa) flowers, alfalfa or lucerne honey is famous for its prebiotic effects.
It has fructooligosaccharides that promote intestinal bacteria and improve digestion. Having alfalfa honey regularly can treat anemia, diabetes, and fever (antipyretic agent).
Try warm waffles, cookies, cheese or yogurt with alfalfa honey. Absolute heaven!
3. Eucalyptus Honey
Unifloral honey derived from the flowers of eucalyptus (Eucalyptus rostrata) has luteolin, kaempferol, quercetin, myricetin, and ellagic acid. This honey acts as a powerful antioxidant and anti-inflammatory agent. Eucalyptus honey has sodium, potassium, manganese, magnesium, iron, copper, and zinc.
Eucalyptus honey can particularly be helpful for children with compromised immunity.
4. Acacia Honey
Acacia honey is a pale, liquid glass-like honey produced by bees that feed on Acacia flowers. It contains vitamins A, C, and E, flavonoids, and essential fatty and amino acids.
Acacia honey has hepatoprotective (liver) and nephroprotective (kidney) effects. Oral and topical administration of acacia has shown tissue proliferativeand vulnerary (wound healing) properties. Studies also demonstrate effective healing properties of acacia honey in corneal (eye) injuries.
This honey variant possesses anti-inflammatory, anticancer, DNA protective, and antioxidant properties too.
5. Buckwheat Honey
Buckwheat honey is a robust, dark honey gathered from the nectar of the delicate, white flowers of the buckwheat grain. A study on buckwheat honey claimed that serum antioxidant capacity increased by 7%. Honey from buckwheat (especially Fagopyrum esculentum) has high bactericidal properties.
Buckwheat honey variants from Canada can kill multi-drug resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) and other notorious pathogens.
Due to its antioxidant properties and an abundance of micro- and macronutrients, buckwheat honey can protect your body and DNA from chemical or oxidative stress – better than manuka honey.
6. Clover Honey
Clover (from Trifollum species) honey is one of the safest dietary antibacterial agents you can get.
Unlike manuka, this honey doesn’t have methylglyoxal and doesn’t need hydrogen peroxide for its antibacterial effect. It is, hence, not a broad-spectrum antimicrobial agent.
Clover honey has unique phenolic compounds, along with the bee-derived antimicrobial peptides. These could be responsible for the specific antioxidant and antimicrobial activity against Pseudomonas, Bacillus, Staphylococcus species.
7. Sage Honey
One of the dark-colored, thicker honey varieties, sage honey is known for its greater sweetening and antioxidant properties. The Californian sage honey is famous for its aroma and flavor.
It has antibacterial, antioxidant, expectorant, and digestive properties. This honey type may also control diabetes.
8. Lavender Honey
Lavender honey is rich in phenolic compounds, amino acids, sugars, and essential enzymes. It has potent antifungal activity against Candida species – thanks to these bioactive elements.
Though not as high as manuka honey, lavender honey too possesses antioxidant capacity because of its vitamin C, catalase, and flavonoids. It is used to treat foot ulcers and other fungal infections on the skin.
9. Rosemary Honey
Rosemary honey is produced from Rosmarinus officinalis and is widely used in European countries. It is rich in kaempferol, an antioxidant
Rosemary honey can be used in emulsions and cosmetics to lock the moisture in the skin. Due to its physicochemical properties, rosemary honey can be used as a natural moisturizing agent with a high therapeutic value.
10. Jamun Honey
Jamun (Syzygium cumini) honey is famous for its antihypoxic activity. A specific dose of this honey can be topically applied to cure the deadly Fournier gangrene.
Since it has high osmotic pressure and viscosity, it prevents microbial growth and promotes wound healing when applied to the affected areas.
That was our list of 10 unifloral honey varieties.
It is evident that each variety has a specialty. You can universally use honey to clean and dress your wounds, cure a dry cough, or boost the antioxidant levels in your body.
If you are looking for a wholesome solution with more potent therapeutic applications, you can read up more about multifloral honey types and FYI, honey has almost no side effects. Nothing major has been documented in any trustworthy source.
References:
- “The Chemical Composition of Honey” Chemistry for Everyone, Journal of Chemical Education
- “Traditional and Modern Uses of Natural…” Iranian Journal of Basic Medical Sciences, US National Library of Medicine
- “Manuka honey” NCI Drug Dictionary, National Cancer Institute
- “Honey as a Complementary Medicine” Integrative Medicine Insights, US National Library of Medicine
- “Identification of flavonoid markers…” Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry, US National Library of Medicine
- “Characterization of Argentine honeys…” Chemistry Central Journal, US National Library of Medicine
- “Potential biological activity of Acacia honey” Frontiers in Bioscience (Elite edition), US National Library of Medicine
- “Buckwheat honey increases serum…” Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry, US National Library of Medicine
- “Powerful bacterial killing by buckwheat…” Frontiers in Microbiology, US National Library of Medicine
- “Biochemical properties, antibacterial and cellular…” Food Chemistry, US National Library of Medicine
- “The Effect of New Zealand Kanuka, Manuka and…” PLoS One, US National Library of Medicine
- “Antifungal effect of lavender honey…” Journal of Food Science and Technology, US National Library of Medicine
- “Antibacterial and Antioxidant Potency…” Molecules 2012
- “Evaluation of pollen as a source of…” Journal of the Science of Food and Agriculture, ResearchGate
- “Pharmacotechnical characterization and effectiveness…” Bollettino chimico farmaceutico, US National Library of Medicine
- “Honey dressing beneficial in treatment…” Indian Journal of Surgery
Source: Handoo, S – StyleCrazy