Honey. Yes that preserve many love.
Many supermarket honey blends are often mixed with cheaper sugar syrups and may not be pure honey, leading to concerns about adulteration and lack of transparency.
It's advisable to check labels for the country of origin and look for single-source honey to ensure quality and authenticity.
Most supermarket honeys are labelled as blends of EU and non-EU honeys. This vague labelling can obscure the true origin and quality of the honey.
I now only buy from a sourced beekeeper, or from local market traders stalls, where they guarantee their honey as being pure and from their own bee hives.
Do not expect a good honey content where the price is below £8.00 a jar, something selling for around £1.79 a jar, do you even know what's in it, specially if it mostly from some foreign non-EU origin like Asia.
The taste tests are a factor also and a pure natural local honey is much, much better IMO.
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safe out there! )