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Using Honey For Natural Remedies

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It's all in the Flower

Did you know that there are over three hundred different recognized varieties of honey produced in the United States alone? Each of these honeys has its own special flavor. Colors and nutritional value vary from type to type, as well.

The massive selection of honeys doesn't stem from manufacturing tricks. It also isn't a matter of what kind of bee populated the producing hive. Honey types are determined by the predominant type of blossom from which the bees gathered their nectar.

Honey is produced after bees lick up the nectar from flowers and bring it back to the hive for further treatment. Bees that spend their time in fields of white clover produce White Clover honey. Different blossoms and surrounding plant life leads to the creation of different honey types.

Honey is not just a tasty way to top a biscuit. It's an incredibly interesting substance with a wide variety of uses. Honey can play a role in everything from burn treatment to barbecue sauce! Its tremendous utility is combined with equally impressive flavor and some very interesting medical benefits. Take some time to learn more about honey!

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Using Honey instead of Sugar

We all know that honey is sweet. Most of us are also aware of the numerous health and nutritional values it has. Honey is clearly a better sweetener option than sugar. However, in many cases, we continue to use cane or beet sugar simply as a matter of convenience. We know honey makes more sense, but using it place of sugar seems complicated.

That's due to a few factors. First, the types of natural sugars in honey leads baked goods to brown more quickly than sugar. Second, honey is much sweeter than sugar, meaning you don't need to use as much as the liquid as you would traditional sugar. Finally, honey is a liquid and most recipes are designed for use with sugar. The increased liquid content skews our recipes.

Fortunately, it's easy to overcome those challenges. In fact, one only needs to learn a few simple rules to make honey a regular part of their daily diet. Do the numbers 25, 2, and 20 mean anything to you? If you aren't sure, but you are interested in eating more healthy honey, it might be time to learn. Three easy guidelines related to those three numbers can help you to use honey like a pro.

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What's so Special about Honey?

Honey is making a serious bid to regain its once-held status as the most popular sweetening agent. Millions are recognizing the numerous health benefits of the bee-produced product and are using it in place of cane or beet sugar in a number of ways. What is so special about honey? Why are people embracing the golden liquid?

Sugar is a great way to create a sweet taste. However, honey is actually twice as sweet as sugar. It also has a more complex and nuanced taste. The mellow and satisfying sweetness of honey offers an incomparable flavor that makes sugar seem dull and “flat” by comparison.

Honey doesn't just bring the taste buds to life, though. It also has numerous health benefits. Not only does honey contain trace minerals, vitamins and antioxidants, it also contains a natural bacterial agent known as inhibine. A bag of sugar doesn't offer the kind of health benefits supplied by honey.

Finally, honey is incredibly flexible. You can find honey in everything from car radiators to golf balls. It isn't just a great way to top a biscuit or to make a sauce. You can use it at home in first aid and there are hundreds of ways to make it a part of your daily hygiene or beauty regimen.

If you haven't made the switch to honey, now is the perfect time to learn more about this wonderful product.

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Honey in the Medicine Cabinet

If you have a jar of honey at home, you probably have it in the pantry or kitchen cupboard. You might want to think about moving it over to your medicine cabinet, though. That's because honey has a number of first aid and medical applications of which many people aren't aware.

Did you know that doctors treated burns and wounds during World War I with honey and that many medical professionals still use raw honey in treatment? A light smear of honey not only protects a wound against foreign agents, it also helps reduce swelling and serves as an antibacterial agent.

People use honey to take the sting out of sunburn, and adding a little honey to another medicine cabinet standby, petroleum jelly, creates an unbeatable lip balm.

Honey is the basis for numerous folk medicine treatments, too. You can use it with the right herbs to take care of everything from bladder infections to a cough.

If you aren't using honey in your medicine cabinet, it is time to learn more about how you can use this highly effective and completely natural product as part of a healthy life.

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Honey, You Look Beautiful

It seems hard to believe, but regurgitated and enzyme-treated liquid flower nectar accumulated by flying insects can be a great way to improve your good looks! We are, of course, talking about honey. What starts as flower nectar ends up in a jar in our cupboard. That golden liquid can do a lot more than flavor a hot cup of tea, however. It is a base ingredient in many economical, organic and high-quality health and beauty aids.

Honey can be fashioned into a facial wash. Don't worry; it won't leave your countenance sticky! It will, however, help reduce flare-ups of pimples. Honey is a great natural acne fighter.

Those who are staring at the bathroom mirror and noticing a receding hairline might want to consider adding honey to their bath or shower ritual, too. A special concoction made with honey can be a means of keeping one's hair from disappearing.

There are scores of ways to use honey as a beauty product. From bath additions to homemade mouthwashes, honey can do it all. If you aren't using honey as part of your personal hygiene routine, you should consider investigating all of the wonderful things you can do with the sweet, natural liquid.

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Surprising Uses of Honey

Stirring some honey into a cup of tea or pouring it on top of a biscuit won't shock anyone. That's what we usually do with the bee product. Honey, however, can be used in some very interesting ways that may leave you marveling at its versatility. Let's look at a few fascinating uses for honey.

Up until the introduction of a special solid core model in the late 1960s, golf balls usually had a rubber center filled with a liquid. Many of those golf balls contained honey. Honey can keep indefinitely and had all the physical traits necessary to make a great liquid-filled golf ball. Today, most balls have a solid core and the mass-produced liquid-center balls use synthetic materials. However, one can occasionally find an older ball that still has honey in the middle.

If that slice of blueberry pie slid off your plate and onto your shirt, you might want to make a beeline for the honey jar. Many people swear by using honey as a laundry pre-wash, especially when they are trying to handle a fruit stain. Honey won't leave your white Oxford shirt sticky, and it may remove that unsightly stain.

There are many other interesting uses for honey. It's used in everything from automobile antifreeze to hair conditioner! If you aren't using honey in your life, you might just not be aware of how versatile it can be. Investigate the many uses of honey.

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Honey, I am Tired!

The next time you are feeling a little beaten down in the middle of the day, you might want to reconsider buying that expensive energy drink or guzzling yet another cup of coffee. There is a natural, less expensive, and far more economical alternative. Honey.

That's right; a quick shot of honey can rejuvenate a person just as effectively as a caffeine-laden drink. Research with serious cyclists at a major American university substantiated the long-held practice of many honey users.

If you aren't in the mood to suck honey from the spoon, manufacturers are producing handy plastic straw-like tubes filled with the liquid. Alternatively, one can dissolve a little honey in water and drink it for a quick energy boost.

If your conception of honey is limited to topping toast or occasionally sweetening a cup of tea, it may be time to expand your horizons. Honey can do interesting things, and serving as a high-powered energy source is only one of its many uses.

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