
Did you know that eating local honey helps curb allergic reaction to your regional pollen? So maybe there isn't a scientific study actually proving this concept, but it makes sense, right? I've heard proponents of herbal remedies push this one for years and, being pretty allergy prone myself, have taken to eating local honey for the past few years. I can't say my allergies are gone so perhaps I should be rationalizing this as more of a 100 mile diet thing. Either way, local honey is the point.
This past summer, at the Turks Head Music Festival, held in West Chester, PA, Jamie came across a booth run by a local honey manufacturer called
Swarmbustin' Honey out of West Grove, PA. He bought four jars of honey which we have been greatly enjoying ever since. Our absolute favorite has been the Buckwheat Honey. Not just a sweetener, as Jamie says this stuff has "mad flavor". It's become our go to honey for salad dressings, on top of ice cream, and I even think he might even have thrown some in the chili he made last week. This honey would make awesome granola but we haven't tried it yet. The Fall Wildflower Honey has been our next most used, we've really enjoyed adding it to our pizza doughs. The last two are both Golden Honey, one in its raw form. I've always loved raw honey - I spread it on toast and put in in my yogurt (yummy Greek yogurt, made out of sheep or goats milk, not this American crap and, god forbid, certainly not this hyped up pro-biotic shit, which people don't seem to realize is just a marketing scam as all REAL yogurt contains pro-biotics). The processed stuff is perfect for baking and for sweetening a cup of peppermint tea to sooth a scratchy throat in winter.
Our supply is beginning to run low so we will have to contacting Mr. Walt Broughton, owner and operator of Swarmbustin' Honey, soon to restock. I'd love to try this new Garlic Honey Vinegar he's advertising and all of his different flavors of Mountain Creme Honey, especially the Hotpepper (doesn't it just sound fabulous!). So whether it's helping my allergies or not, I'm definitely sticking with this local honey. Sometimes tasty is more important than healthy.
One last thought: the honey bee population is in grave danger in North America and the problem has spread to Europe. Without bees, not only will we not have delicious honey but about a third of our agricultural products will go unpollinated. This isn't just bad news for bees, this is bad news for life on a global scale. They're calling the phenomenon Colony Collapse Disorder (CCD) and some are suggesting that radiation from cell phones is behind the problem. So what do we do? Companies like
Haagen-Dasz and
Burt's Bees are trying to raise awareness while activist groups like the
WSBF (World Save Bees Fund) are trying to politicize the issue. Bottom line is that we need bees. Please spread the word.