You may be correct but the 230 F temperature I got from various sites on line that provide the caramelization temperature of sucrose, Fructose caramelizes at 320 F and from a youtube video (I know, I know) about making soft caramels where you monitor the temperature and cut the cooking at 250 F The sugar is heated with cream ) and allow the mix to cool and harden and you have chewy caramels...But the correct temperature seems to me to be less the point as no one seems to bother about temperature. They talk about time on the burner or stove - This is the color at 30 minutes and that the color at 45 minutes but we never hear what temperature the honey reaches - If I cook honey at 100 F will it take only 30 minutes to reach that brown color or will it take 2 weeks? And if I cook the honey at 500 F will it burn in 5 minutes or simply turn a shade darker.. Seems to me that either no one really understands what they are doing or they do but the key is to keep what they do a mystery...
You have those switched.... Sucrose caramelizes at 320 fructose caramelizes at 230..
Fructose is the only "sugar" with a low temperature caramelization point.
Sucrose, glucose and galactose all caramelize at 320.
When you add dairy products to the mixture everything changes... The proteins in the dairy will "caramelize" at much lower temperatures....
Pastry Chef here for almost 20 years... I use a thermometer...
Honey is about 50% fructose.. Which has the lower caramelization point.... That's where the issue comes in.
Another issue is that when you cook honey the first thing that occurs is you burn impurities before caramelization occurs (same for regular sugar....).
You can produce toasted flavors before the Millard reaction occurs.
I'm currently conducting various sugar experiments related to using an induction burner with precise temperature control to see more accurately about caramelization and crystallization in the solutions...
I haven't yet but part of this is to be able to better control the honey for making a bochet.
When you read various blogs and experiments on sugar about making candy syrup they say to use dap... Citric acid.. Etc.. To invert the sugar so it wont recrystallize after the solution is made.... Hearing that I knew it was completly unnecessary.... What is happening is as soon as the sugar darkens people stop cooking it so it won't burn (carry over cooking is huge here because of a tight waterless thermal mass)... When you do that.... A good chunk of the sugar is not caramelized. The part that has caramelized has died the color of the solution that has not and what has not will seed the mixture and cause recrystalization.
I cannot recommend induction enough for sugar work... It is always easier to have precision control and for home equipment amazon..... Nuwave platinum has 5 degree increments for temperature control (the one that will do specific temps is around 2k....not bad cause they were 8k a few years ago).
Honey is fickle because it has the ability to caramelize at low temperatures but also because it's "dirty"... With the induction I would set the temp for about 215 and slowly cook it until it seems to be right.. And with sugar visual is not the key. Any good chef will tell you "the nose knows". There is a distinct difference between caramelized sugar and burnt sugar.
Feel free to keep in touch with me and I will be happy to keep you updated on my sugar experiments. I plan on putting it all together and giving my research to James Spencer at bbr so you never know... Maybe he will have an episode with me some day.
It's not about being a mystery... Remember the nose knows and it's just about getting used to the medium... When I finished culinary school my sugar work was far from spectacular... Practice makes a difference.
You can do micro batches of bochet and see what you get and what you like..
Use the stove and a pot and make some 1 gallon batches.... Cook one recipe of honey for 30 minutes... 40, etc. And see what you like.
Sorry for the long post and rambling I've been sampling too much homebrew today.