|
Post by SA Hunter on Sept 15, 2020 17:05:16 GMT 10
Watching the tv series "Life Below Zero".
One of the people had a tub of powdered honey - anyone have any or use/used it?
Is it any good?
|
|
|
Post by Stealth on Sept 15, 2020 20:30:09 GMT 10
I've heard of it before too, but never come across it myself. I've also heard of and used powdered peanut butter and that stuff is both weird and awesome. Great for flavouring cakes and pancakes and stuff, but I don't know that I'd just use it reconstituted. It's a bit weird without the oils.
Anyway lol. Honey is basically an eternal food so I'm not sure I'd bother with the additional expense of having a powdered version without very good need. I'm guessing lightness and space would be the main benefits. But if you're just worried about a food that lasts forever well... Honey does that anyway so you're really just paying a premium for a product that's been dehydrated for no reason OTHER than weight consideration.
|
|
shinester
Senior Member
China's white trash
Posts: 3,119
Likes: 3,578
Email: shiny@ausprep.org
|
Post by shinester on Sept 15, 2020 23:11:21 GMT 10
Wouldn't powdered honey be crystallized/dehydrated honey that's ground down? Aka you could make it for free. I don't see the point, though I suppose it's the same as sugar in that form?
|
|
|
Post by SA Hunter on Sept 15, 2020 23:16:14 GMT 10
|
|
dirtdiva
Senior Member
Posts: 548
Likes: 929
Email: cannedquilter@gmail.com
|
Post by dirtdiva on Sept 16, 2020 2:10:53 GMT 10
I just store natural honey. My 9 year old grandson has taken to a fascination with honey bees. Up to 9 hives now so he bottles some special for grandma and sells the rest. Definitely an entrepreneur in the making
|
|