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Clover honey is a monofloral honey produced by bees that mainly feed off of clover nectar. It is known for mild, floral flavor and is great when used for topping foods or when used in baking.
Gallberry honey is a favorite among foodies and chefs as it goes well as a sugar substitute for dishes, pastries and drinks. Its warm and rich honey flavor adds a twist to usual home cooking and baking fare. This honey also has a thick consistency and is known for its lack of crystals (it takes a while for it to crystallize in contrast with other types of honey). This is caused by a high level of diastase enzymes in it which is responsible for preventing Gallberry honey from crystallizing even in cold temperatures.
Gallberry usually goes in full bloom during the month of May and can be found growing mostly in the low flatlands of North Carolina, Northern Florida and Georgia. Other sources state that Gallberry, which is harvested from the holly bush, also grows abundantly in the wetlands of Southeast Florida and the Gulf and South Atlantic Coast. This local honey is recommended for people with allergies.
Gallberry usually goes in full bloom during the month of May and can be found growing mostly in the low flatlands of North Carolina, Northern Florida and Georgia. Other sources state that Gallberry, which is harvested from the holly bush, also grows abundantly in the wetlands of Southeast Florida and the Gulf and South Atlantic Coast. This local honey is recommended for people with allergies.
Orange blossom honey is a monofloral honey derived from the nectar of delicate, white orange blossoms. This honey has a subtle hint of citrus in taste and is quite sweet. The color of this honey is often light and golden but can also come in a darker shade. Honey makers and suppliers have observed that the color actually changes each year.
This is a product of our separate line, Queen Bee Honey Farm, that highlights the best honey we can find outside of the United States. This Orange Blossom Honey is a product of Mexico.
Orange blossom honey is a monofloral honey derived from the nectar of delicate, white orange blossoms. This honey has a subtle hint of citrus in taste and is quite sweet. The color of this honey is often light and golden but can also come in a darker shade. Honey makers and suppliers observed that the color actually changes each year.
Sourwood honey is highly regarded by honey makers and connoisseurs alike. With a beautiful straw color, the Sourwood texture is smooth and comes across as 'rich' versus a more typically 'sweet' conventional honey. The flavor profile is a soft delicious caramel.
Sourwood is indigenous to the Southern Appalachians that run across the regions of Northern Georgia and Northwestern Carolina. The trees grow in wild locations - not convenient orchard like settings, and challenges like inquisitive bears or extended rainy periods make for often small, and increasingly rare, honey harvests. Sourwood flowers are white and bell-shaped, and they dangle from branches in clusters that can be a foot long. Sourwood is one of the local honeys that are well recommended for people with regional allergies.
Georgia Honey Farm’s Specialty Honeys - Three Pack includes one 16 oz. jar of three most requested types of honey: Tupelo, Sourwood, and Wildflower.
This combination is perfect for high-end Honey aficionados that can appreciate the subtle differences across 3 notable varieties of liquid gold! Sourwood honey is highly regarded by honey makers and connoisseurs alike. With a beautiful straw color, the Sourwood texture is smooth and comes across as 'rich' versus a more typically 'sweet' conventional honey. The flavor profile is a soft delicious caramel. The taste of Tupelo honey is smooth, sweet, light honey with a mild floral and fruity taste. Tupelo honey's color is light golden amber with a greenish cast. The aroma is cinnamon and floral. Wildflower honey is produced from nectars harvested by bees from a wild variety of flowers - rich and delicious. Wildflower comes in amber color and has a robust aroma.
Georgia Honey Farm’s Three Pack Honey Sampler includes one 16 oz. jar of three popular types of honey: Wildflower Honey, Clover Honey, and Tupelo Honey.
Clover honey is a monofloral honey produced by bees that mainly feed off of clover nectar. It is known for mild, floral flavor and is great when used for topping foods or in baking. Wildflower honey is produced from nectars harvested by bees from a wild variety of flowers - rich and delicious. Wildflower comes in amber color and has a robust aroma. The taste of Tupelo honey is smooth, sweet, light honey with a mild floral and fruity taste. Tupelo honey's color is light golden amber with a greenish cast. The aroma is cinnamon and floral.
Named as the "champagne of honeys", "Queen of honey", "Southern Gold." Tupelo honey comes from the green-white blossom of the white tupelo gum tree (Nyssa Ogeche). These blossoms are notoriously fragile. In good years, tupelo trees will bloom for only a few weeks. However in a bad year, the nectar flow only in few days.
This raw unfiltered honey comes from the white tupelo trees. The Apalachicola and Chipola river basins, which run from North to South in Gulf County, contain some of the highest concentrations of tupelo trees in the world. The taste is smooth, sweet, light honey with a mild floral and fruity taste. The honey color is light golden amber with a greenish cast. The aroma is cinnamon and floral. This honey, unlike most honeys, resists crystallization and stay as a liquid for years.
Honey sticks, sometimes referred to as honey straws, make a great "sweet treat" for snack time and bag lunches. The individual sticks are a handy pocket or purse to-go size, to be consumed by themselves or paired with another treat (tea, coffee, ice cream, fruit, cereal, etc.).
There are several ways to open the honey stick: bite the end of the honey stick, pinch with your fingers, or cut with scissors.
This 1lb bag contains approximately 80 individual wildflower honey sticks.
Wildflower honey is produced from nectars harvested by bees from a wild variety of flowers. The harvest period runs from April to June during which honeybees would go through a system of flowers to collect nectar from blackberries, tulip poplars, black locusts, maple, basswood and a lot more. This garden variety of wild flowers is what gives wildflower honey its distinct, complex floral flavor. It comes in amber color and has a robust aroma. This local honey is recommended for people with allergies.