Fake Honey Is In Most Stores…Study Shows. Learn How To Know The Difference

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Wouldn’t it be upsetting if you thought you were buying some good old natural honey, when in fact you’ve just bought honey that had all the goodness taken out of it?  Or worse yet, it being full of heavy metals and illegal antibiotics.  We’re sure you know that honey can be very nutritious and good for our health. But what if you had bought the fake stuff?  On the Next Page, learn how to know the difference between the real honey and the fake honey.

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208 Responses to “Fake Honey Is In Most Stores…Study Shows. Learn How To Know The Difference”

  1. Chris Portillo Johnson

    Jan 30. 2016

    Thsmks good tead

    Reply to this comment
  2. Estella Camelion

    Feb 02. 2016

    Always Buy local honey and don’t spray poison on your garden.

    Reply to this comment
  3. Ron-Gale Preston

    Feb 03. 2016

    Good to know.

    Reply to this comment
  4. Mary Lou Facto

    Feb 03. 2016

    I buy local or from my organic grocer. ONLY.

    Reply to this comment
  5. Cheryl Smith

    Feb 03. 2016

    buy from local beekeepers, not from the store.

    Reply to this comment
  6. ..

    Reply to this comment
  7. Katherine Kleeb

    Feb 04. 2016

    Vegetables and fruits bought at the grocery store have been through rigorous safety procedures – from farm to fork. You can grow plants in your backyard but that does not protect them from bugs, pests, animals (those that eat them and those that pee and poop on them). So yes I would say that produce bought at the grocery story is far safer than those you grow in your own back yard. The fact that you buy into all this organic nonsense says far more about you than it does about the processes put in place to keep our food safe.

    Reply to this comment
  8. Nellie Easter

    Feb 04. 2016

    Support your local farms (y) Buy local 🙂

    Reply to this comment
  9. Gloria Watson

    Feb 05. 2016

    I’m so glad my hubby raises bees…..we KNOW our honey is “real”…

    Reply to this comment
  10. Kit Bartle

    Feb 06. 2016

    great readomg of you are a honey user, I get mine from our feed store, produced locally

    Reply to this comment
  11. Arlene Tannis

    Feb 08. 2016

    That’s right… buy local, and it tastes better, anyway!

    Reply to this comment
  12. Linda Johnson-winesett

    Feb 09. 2016

    Buy local is usually best to reap the benefits. Mine has big, fat sections of honeycomb on it. Cut it and watch it ooze onto the dish.

    Reply to this comment
  13. Jo Ann Lowe

    Feb 09. 2016

    Interesting. Glad to see Trader Joes on there along with the co-ops.

    Reply to this comment
  14. June Newbery

    Feb 09. 2016

    My Honey is labeled Raw Honey and comes from Kroger.

    Reply to this comment
  15. Liz Guptill

    Feb 09. 2016

    local honey at the health food store so yummy and healthy

    Reply to this comment
  16. Bonnie Foley

    Feb 09. 2016

    I think you need to do a little research if you believe that real honey from a local beekeeper is an inferior product, the taste alone is superior to “your usual store bought honey”. The pasteurized goodness you buy has the yeast heated out of it and 40% of the nutrients.Not to mention the fillers used.(read the ingredients) I know this fact because I work for an apiary. As for your fruits and vegetables,have you heard about GMO’s and that they have been banned in Ontario as well as a lot of other countries, not to mention the poisons sprayed on crops. Yeah I’ll grow my own and wash it before I eat it and I don’t mind sharing with the insects, they like real food.

    Reply to this comment
  17. Katherine Kleeb

    Feb 09. 2016

    Bonnie – GMOs are not banned in Ontario. Perhaps you should do your own research instead of believing the hype spewed out by sites such as this that are fear mongering so that people like you will rush out an buy their overpriced products.

    Pasteurization was developed for a reason – to take out impurities that can make you sick.

    I don’t care about insects, but I care about other naturally occurring ‘bugs’ like E. Coli and salmonella. Still, when you are hospitalized because of this ‘natural’ is best nonsense. Be sure to tell the doctors you don’t want any of their poisonous medicine.

    Reply to this comment
  18. Katherine Kleeb

    Feb 09. 2016

    Bonnie – GMOs are not banned in Ontario. Perhaps you should do your own research instead of believing the hype spewed out by sites such as this that are fear mongering so that people like you will rush out an buy their overpriced products.

    Pasteurization was developed for a reason – to take out impurities that can make you sick.

    I don’t care about insects, but I care about other naturally occurring ‘bugs’ like E. Coli and salmonella. Still, when you are hospitalized because of this ‘natural’ is best nonsense. Be sure to tell the doctors you don’t want any of their poisonous medicine.

    Reply to this comment
  19. Katherine Kleeb

    Feb 09. 2016

    It can also contain botulism, and (depending on the flowers the bees got the nectar from) can also contain a toxic element that causes paralysis. If you going to talk about the benefits, then you should talk about the dangers as well.

    Reply to this comment
  20. Sue Woods

    Feb 11. 2016

    Raw honey needs to be refrigerated doesn’t it?

    Reply to this comment
  21. Barbara Matheson

    Feb 12. 2016

    We’re bringing wild honey home with us from Jamaica where our friend stuck his arm down a deep hole in the rocks to grab the honeycomb from the wild hive…nothing fake here!

    Reply to this comment
  22. The only way to know, is to buy from a local beekeeper, or buy raw honey… The honey in the store, are all over processed! And have no health benefits to it… You might as well use syrup!!!

    Reply to this comment
  23. Sorry, but! Consumer reports, did a test on different honeys, from different companies, and found they all were over processed. And trader joe’s was one of them! They said if it’s not raw, it’s probably not honey…

    Reply to this comment
  24. No.

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  25. Yes it can.

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  26. Consumer reports, said yes! If it’s not raw or unpasteurized, then chances are it’s fake… What happens is it gets over processed, in the heating of the honey, and the healthy pollens, the good stuff, gets taken out of the honey, then all your left with, is a syrup!

    Reply to this comment
  27. Consumer reports, said no! Trader Joe’s is fake.

    Reply to this comment
  28. Lori Anne Burgess

    Feb 14. 2016

    Alyssa Sluser Pratt I was telling darwin about this

    Reply to this comment
  29. Elaine Frey

    Feb 15. 2016

    This is BS, most stores source honey locally.

    Reply to this comment
  30. Janice Scheffer

    Feb 16. 2016

    quit stealing the bees food…how the hell would you like it if someone broke into your hime and stole your food…bee spit/bee vomit

    Reply to this comment
  31. Janice Scheffer

    Feb 16. 2016

    Reply to this comment
  32. Only get raw

    Reply to this comment
  33. Linda Neuman

    Feb 17. 2016

    Not sure I would call it “fake” maybe adulterated or not pure as there is actually a fake honey made from apples for vegans or those who have issues with honey.

    Reply to this comment
  34. Lynette Smith

    Feb 18. 2016

    “He did find out, however, that honey purchased from co-ops, farmers markets and stores like Trader Joes contained the full amount of original pollen.” 😀

    Reply to this comment
  35. Lila Mcghee

    Feb 18. 2016

    I dont buy it.Buy from same local bee keepers.This is sad and sick.

    Reply to this comment
  36. Lila Mcghee

    Feb 18. 2016

    we saw labeled honey,contains honey flavored corn syrup. Whic is dangerous to many people.

    Reply to this comment
  37. Della Kasko

    Feb 19. 2016

    Me too! Best honey ever!

    Reply to this comment
  38. Jill Campbell Connolly

    Feb 19. 2016

    I guess I’m lucky. Our grocery store carries raw unfiltered honey from a local bee keeper.

    Reply to this comment
  39. Remedios Aquino

    Feb 19. 2016

    Didn’t even mention how to know the real honey to a fake one!!

    Reply to this comment
  40. Cheryl McVicar-Spear

    Feb 20. 2016

    Buy local.

    Reply to this comment
  41. Bonnie Foley

    Feb 21. 2016

    Pasteurizing is done only to give the honey a longer liquid shelf time before it crystalizes, as raw honey crystalizes quickly(that means its real raw honey). Why don’t you look up O.B.A. and do some research. GMO seeds have been banned in Ontario and some farmers are fighting it. Have you not heard about the bee decline because of all these poisons? You need to wake up…keep trolling for poisons, you are part of the problem.

    Reply to this comment
  42. Bonnie Foley

    Feb 21. 2016

    You just keep enjoying your GMO products, and yes they are being phased out of Ontario’s crops. As I said do some research…look up the O.B.A. and get the information.

    Reply to this comment
  43. I was thinking the same thing when I read the article. The headline is misleading and not actually true. Although the article is informative I’m left wondering if I can believe everything claimed in it due to the headline.

    Reply to this comment
  44. Katherine Kleeb

    Feb 21. 2016

    Reply to this comment
  45. Judy Shephard Vecchio

    Feb 22. 2016

    Sandy Shephard

    Reply to this comment
  46. Joy Wright

    Feb 23. 2016

    We buy ours from our nephew who is a beekeeper.

    Reply to this comment
  47. Rose Obringer

    Feb 24. 2016

    Katherine Kleeb my Mom always said there are some in life you just can’t educate.

    Reply to this comment
  48. Bonnie Foley

    Feb 24. 2016

    If you want to keep consuming your poison injected seeds, which grows through out the plant and is then again processed with more chemicals, you be my guest. You must realize also this is then used to feed animals as well, which will be processed with more chemicals as well. Happy eating…

    Reply to this comment
  49. Sue Woods

    Feb 24. 2016

    That what I would like to know!

    Reply to this comment
  50. Anya Leveille

    Feb 26. 2016

    I find articles like this really annoying. They spend 90% writing about why honey is good, etc etc-then tell you a few stores where it’s bad and a few where it’s ok. That’is NOT “learning how to know the difference”. Very misleading.

    Reply to this comment

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