Honey

In Food item, Honey by Sue Marshall

Honey is literally a liquid sugar and it’s sweeter than sugar. As part of a normal diabetic diet, it should be used with due care. Make a very little go a long way, or you will see detrimental effects on your blood glucose levels. But its the super-sugary side of honey that makes it a rather good hypo treatment. Just a spoonful might sort you out quite quickly if your sugar level is dropping.  

It’s a shame that the sweetness of honey is likely to be a problem for a diabetic, as there are many claims as to its medicinal properties. Oddly, it’s even meant to be good spread on smaller wounds and topical (i.e. placed on the skin) honey has been used successfully in a comprehensive treatment of diabetic ulcers. Who’d have thought? 

Writing in The Guardian online, Joanna Blythman and Rosie Sykes commented: Raw, cold extracted honey hasn’t been heat-treated and “purified”, so still contains its full complement of enzymes and antioxidants, and has antibacterial properties. Manuka honey is most effective in killing antibiotic-resistant infections, such as MRSA. Manuka is the only honey so far that is widely acknowledged to have proven medicinal effects, but earlier this year a study at the University of Glasgow’s School of Veterinary Medicine found that heather honey also killed MRSA microbes and three other strains of pathogenic bacteria. Raw honey is increasingly used to treat hard-to-heal wounds. Several studies support the traditional use of honey as a cough soother. But like all sugars, honey should only be eaten in small amounts, which isn’t that hard, because its natural intensity makes it tough to overdo anyway. 

Highly recommended 

Honey has been referred to in art and literature pretty much since either of those undertakings began, with cave wall paintings showing honey gathering, and both the Bible and the Qur’an mentioning it (the Prophet Muhammad is quoted as recommending honey for healing purposes) 

You should already know that it’s made by bees, and consists of fructose, glucose, maltose, and sucrose. Taste and types of honey are based on where they come from and what flowers the bees are likely to have been feasting on. Hence the wide choices available, from acacia to clover, Scottish Heather or Spanish orange blossom.  

To get the honey, the honeycomb is removed from the hive and the honey is extracted from that, often using a honey extractor, a simple centrifuge that spins the honey out leaving the wax that makes up the honeycomb behind. The honey is then filtered. Darker coloured honey tends to have a stronger flavourCut comb is honey still in the honeybees’ wax comb.  

Antibacterial activity 

Manuka honey currently has a high cachet. Coming from New Zealand or Australia, it’s made by bees feeding on the Manuka or tea-tree. Just as tea-tree oils are used to treat pimples, tea-tree (manuka) honey also has anti-bacterial properties. So much so, it received approval to be used in wound management from the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in 2007. It has a gel-like state when sat in a jar at room temperature, but will liquify when stirred, which is already a bit of a mysterious quality. 

It is sold with a rating of, for example, 12+ or  20+. This rating was created by an organization called TradeNZ and the Honey Research Unit, which in 1996 set about to establish a standard for the classification of antibacterial honey activity. This led to the creation of the UMF industry standard (Unique Manuka Factor). The Honey Research Unit developed a procedure for rating honies, which has now been in place for some time. After being tested, the honeys are given the rating based their tested antibacterial activity. A UMF rating of 10 (10+) is the minimum activity to gain the UMF. Honey achieving this rating is commonly referred to as Active Manuka Honey, although manuka honey is often marketed as being ‘active’ even though it is not. Only honey that carries the UMF registered trademark should be chosen if the intended use is for therapeutic purposes, and the majority of the recent medical trial have predominantly used manuka honey with a UMF strength of 10 or more.  

If you don’t want to ingest the honey, other products use it to good effect, from skincare to medical ointment for external use only, such as Meloderm Ointment – 40% UMF15+ Active Manuka Honey which can be used for minor burns, cuts, grazes, stings and skin infections. 

Keeping it local 

In recent years, due to worrying news about Colony Collapse Disorder, with entire populations of worker bees simply disappearing, as well as ongoing concerns about the environment as a whole, has lead to an upsurge of interest in bees and in beekeeping (apiculture). 

Steve Benbow (@londonhoneyman), living in a relatively modern apartment block near London’s Tower Bridge started up a bee hive on the roof and has grown his interest from there and other areas in Britain, giving rise to Borage Honey, Isle of Purbeck Honey, and Salisbury Honey from bees that roam across Salisbury Plain. You ca n buy honey or book courses on his website, where you can also get an entire honeycomb frame, complete with honey, as lifted from the hive. Nothing going to waste, you can also buy beeswax candles. www.londonhoney.co.uk  

There are other inner-city operators – a positive swarm of other apiarists harvesting honey across the London skyline at www.urbanbees.co.uk 

Typical honey analysis: 

Fructose: 38.2%
Glucose: 31.3%
Maltose: 7.1%
Sucrose: 1.3%
Water: 17.2% 

The glycaemic index of honey can range from 31 to 78, depending on the variety. In other words, it’s going to absorb quickly and release up all its (many) sugars into your blood stream rather promptly. 

Honey boosts 
Diabee’s honey doses 

Glucose tablets can be tasteless and crumble in transit; glucose solutions are heavy, and sweets usually contain animal gelatin, fats and artificial ingredients. DiaBee solves all these niggles as they are tasty, light-weight, highly portable, robust and have a long shelf life. DiaBee provides an array of vitamins, minerals, bioflavonoids and anti-oxidantsEach DiaBee ‘dose’ contains 5g of carbohydrate (all sugars). This dosage gives you a high degree of control. It can be used to pre-empt a hypo during rigorous exercise or taken to fine-tune blood sugars at the first indication of a hypoglycaemic episode; consumption of two or three doses work effectively if more serious blood sugar drops are experienced. Keep them in pockets, bags, car doors, bedside tables, desk drawers, gymbags. They also fit into most standard insulin kitbags, taking up very little room, adding very little weight but are there and easy to use when you need them.  

Honey to go 

Manuka Active 16+ Honey on the Go Travel Packs give convenience (but no mess) making it an option for a hypo treatment. Snap them open and squeeze the honey into your mouth. Each box contains 24 single serving sized pouches of raw Manuka Active 16+ honey sourced from pristine areas of New Zealand’s South Island. Each jar is traceable back to the master beekeeper. It has a high pollen count, live enzymes and antioxidants, so it’ll boost more than your blood sugar level. There are 80g of carbohydrate per 100g of product, with 4g per serving. www.wedderspoon.co.uk 

Honey supplement 

LifeMel is an Israeli-farmed honey food supplement which is undergoing second stage clinical trial in Italy to prove it aids recovery for cancer patients (and a third stage clinical trial is to be held in the UK if the second stage trial is successful). Research has showed that functional honey can be a good supplement for those wanting to increase their daily intake of anti-oxidants. It can enhance the immune system and alleviating side effects of chemotherapy and/or radiotherapy. LifeMel is made by bees feeding on Echinacea, Nettle, Marigold, Lemon Balm, Swiss Chard, Siberian Ginseng, Bilberry, Dandelion, Fig, Red Clover, White Mulberry, Chicory and Blackcurrant flowers. 

www.nuvitalityuk

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