A TASTE OF HONEY
To make honey, bees collect nectar from
nearby flowering plants; transform it by combining it with specific
substances of their own; and deposit it, dehydrate it, store it and
leave it in honeycombs to ripen and mature. That’s where we come in.
Ancient rock art in Spain shows our forebears braving wild bees to steal
their honeycomb; Éric Valli’s photos document Nepal’s Gurung tribesmen
harnessed to cliff-hugging bamboo ladders to relieve Himalayan cliff
bees of their honeycomb; and on YouTube, there are numerous videos
depicting Hadza men following a honeyguide bird to a hive then smoking
out the stinging bees before helping themselves to the honeycomb. The
take-home: honey has long been highly desirable and Homo sapiens goes to
great lengths to get it.
What’s in honey? Honey, which provided our ancestors
with a tasty source of calories from carbohydrates (all sugars), also
has traces of bee larvae which add some fat, protein, vitamins, and
minerals to the nutritional mix. Today, we know that honey also contains
antioxidants.
The sweetness comes mostly from
fructose, glucose and sucrose, plus small amounts of maltose, trehalose,
turanose (varies depending on nectar source). Most honeys have more
fructose than glucose – typically 38 per cent fructose to 30 percent
glucose – but that’s not set in stone. It all depends on where the bees
have been buzzing, which is also why sweetness can vary: some are equal
in sweetness to regular granulated sugar; others are up to 50 per cent
sweeter. To achieve consistent sweetness and flavour, most commercial
honeys are blended from a mixture of honeys derived from different hives
and different floral sources.
What about GI? We are
often asked whether honey is a better sweetener choice than regular
sugar when it comes to blood glucose levels. Again, it depends very much
on what blossom the bees were buzzing around, gathering nectar. While
most commercial blended varieties have an effect greater than or equal
to that of sugar, some honeys have a low glycemic index. The range of
glycemic-index values from all the honeys that have been tested over the
years runs from GI 32 up to GI 87 and you can check them out on the
database at www.glycemicindex.com. When the University of Sydney
Glycemic Index Research Service tested pure wildflower (single floral)
honeys—red gum, yellow box, ironbark, and others—produced by allowing
bees access only to some types of gum trees (eucalypts), they found that
these honeys all have a low glycemic index (GI 35 to 53). We would like
to think it’s possible that all pure wildflower honeys have only modest
glycemic effects, but there hasn’t been sufficient testing around the
world. We do know that Romanian locust honey appears to have the lowest
glycemic index value of all the honeys tested to date (GI 32).
Why
all the differences in glycemic impact from one honey to another? To
maintain a consistent flavor in commercial honeys, some of the more
pungent components are removed. We suspect that these removed components
are physiologically active and work to slow down absorption into the
small intestine. For example, Australian wildflower honeys might contain
alpha-glucosidase inhibitors that bees have extracted from the eucalypt
flowers. We know that these potent inhibitors exist in many plants,
and, indeed, some diabetic medications (e.g., acarbose) are based on
pure forms of these inhibitors.
In addition, it appears
that the higher the fructose content, the lower the glycemic index is.
Five German honeys with fructose content ranging from 38.5 to 43.5 per
cent not only had a low glycemic index, but also had a low insulin index
– this is a relative ranking of the effect of 240 calories/1000
kilojoules of food on blood insulin concentrations over a two-hour
period.
Read more:
- The Ultimate Guide to Sugars and Sweeteners (The Experiment Publishing)
- www.glycemicindex.com (searchable GI database)
- Buzz: The Nature and Necessity of Bees (Basic Books)
- Éric Valli’s honey hunters
- PHOTO: Drake Eatery, Bondi Beach: Toasted crumpet, honey, ricotta, banana, walnuts (East Coast Forest Honey – pure, raw, natural honey) – Kai Leishman