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What is honey costing you?

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BudNini

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Just wondering what the price of honey is in other areas of the country?
In my area of New York I have found a place that charges $3.75 a pound plus tax of course. I have yet to taste this honey as I just found this place. Sure hope it is good as the price is all most too good to be true.The honey is local raw clover. I am going to find supplier and buy in bulk.
 
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$20 for 5lbs -- local raw clover honey -- here in Southeast Michigan.

Cheers!
 
$20 for 5 lbs for either wildflower, desert blend, or mesquite here in AZ.
 
I feel like I lucked out and found that a discount store near me had Gunters orange blossom for 3.99/lb. then another chain store has Golden Harvest wildflower for $10 for a 3lb bottle.
 
Costco wildflower honey is $10 for 5lbs. My experience is that this used as a portion of the mead along with specialty honey still makes a very good mead. In fact the more I experiment the more I believe the yeast adds alot to the final flavor. I've also found that I shouldn't touch my mead for at least a year post fermentation. YMMV.
 
I found a local guy (Nebraska) selling 12lb gallons for $50.
I am looking at upping to 5 gal buckets from bulk suppliers. I've found a couple of places with varietal honeys (Cranberry, Blueberry, Wildflower, etc) for ~$200 ($3.33/lb.)
Other than that, Costco generally has pretty good prices on generic clover honey in 5lb bottles.
 
Do you guys know what bakers choice honey is ?

Bakers choice is the darker honey that doesn't pass the visual check for the amber color that people think of a 'clover' honey. used for baking because all they care about is the honey taste in the final product. I've never used it, but if your doing a mead that has other flavors (e.g. a metheglin) which is spice forward, you are probably ok. I would do a small batch to make sure that there aren't any off flavors in the honey, and then go for it.
 
I think $7-8 is typical, plus shipping if buying online. I haven't made mead from the local wildflower yet but it certainly tastes good in tea :)
A friend of mine bought 5 gallons (60 lb) of tupelo last year for $750 and was happy to get it.
 
Just wondering what the price of honey is in other areas of the country?
In my area of New York I have found a place that charges $3.75 a pound plus tax of course. I have yet to taste this honey as I just found this place. Sure hope it is good as the price is all most too good to be true.The honey is local raw clover. I am going to find supplier and buy in bulk.
Why tax? Honey is food!
 
Last summer I was paying $20.00 for 2.5 lb jars of local, raw honey in Northridge (Los Angeles), CA. The farmers market has not opened this year due to the COVID-19 outbreak so I don't know what the current prices is. I am on my last bottle of the winter stock and was hoping to get more this spring.
 
Well, it’s not funny, actually. I shop at LHBS frequently and one charges tax on everything and another sells grain not taxed (as food) when I mentioned it the one collecting tax wasn’t sure. :confused:
 
Honey from Monarch on the East Coast is running for about $2.50 a pound including delivery to my door for wildflower. less for Bakers choice and a bit more for orange blossom. But you must buy it in 5 gallon 60# buckets. I have used them almost exclusively through the Webstaurant store when i cant get honey from my local apiary (I can get it for $3.00 a pound when in season) and have been pretty happy with the Monarch product. (The Fed Ex gal delivering the buckets hates me and just drops them at the garage and wont even bring them to the front steps.)

https://www.webstaurantstore.com/monarchs-choice-60-lb-wildflower-honey/789HONWILD60.html
 

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I get Brazilian pepper honey for 150$ for 5 gal
Same plant but in Hawaii is anywhere from 380-500 for 5 gallon.
Brazilian pepper/ Christmas berry = same honey just different locations
 
Costco wildflower honey is $10 for 5lbs.

That is assuredly rice syrup and not real honey. You can't even buy real honey wholesale for $2/lb. When it comes to honey, you definitely get what you pay for. Rice syrup adulteration is rampant, especially anything super cheap online or in a retail store.
 
That is assuredly rice syrup and not real honey. You can't even buy real honey wholesale for $2/lb. When it comes to honey, you definitely get what you pay for. Rice syrup adulteration is rampant, especially anything super cheap online or in a retail store.

Their clover honey is 'true source certified' for whatever that's worth. It's cheap imported honey (apparently from South America) and it ferments well to make decent meads. Knowing Costco, they probably purchase the full production of several apiaries on contract several years at a time.
 
Their clover honey is 'true source certified' for whatever that's worth. It's cheap imported honey (apparently from South America) and it ferments well to make decent meads. Knowing Costco, they probably purchase the full production of several apiaries on contract several years at a time.

At Apimondia this year, adulteration was the main topic and there were a few NMR(Nuclear Magnetic Resonance) food testing startups. One of the companies went to Costco and tested every honey they had just as a baseline test, and all tested positive for rice syrup, but he didn't publish his findings because he didn't want to get in any legal trouble with Costco. He also was not a beekeeper or really affiliated with the honey industry, so I mostly trusted his motives, he was just selling their service for food testing in general. But that $10 for 5lbs is supposedly from the US...and there is not a single supplier that I have ever heard of that would even sell that wholesale cheap enough to make a retail profit at $2.
 
<looks at the rabbit hole of C4 vs C3 testing>

Interesting. Looks like if it's getting adulterated, it's at the source. Which calls into question all commercially sourced honey.

Lately, I have been buying from a local bee keeper.
 
It's probably some at the source and moreso at the broker level I'd guess. I mean if it ferments it ferments and if it's tasty, all the better. I would just say it's closer to a honey flavored rice wine than mead 😂.

All that being said, Im starting my first batch of mead tomorrow. I did homebrew in college, but that was twenty five years ago with extracts and hopped extract kits that came in cans. Need to relearn everything. Also hoping to turn a large portion of it into honey vinegar. Fingers crossed!
 
I should add that along with the rice syrup, whatever honey in it is probably illegally imported Chinese honey. If you do a Google search, you find that three of the largest honey importers and packers quietly paid multi million dollar fines and pleaded guilty of illegally importing chinese honey and relabelling it as from the US or from another non-Chinese country. If the biggest three were doing it, you have to assume the others are doing it as well to be able to keep up. Chinese honey is loaded with antibiotics and often lead, which is bad for adults, but HORRIBLE for children. If you have Netflix, watch Rotten Season 1, Episode 1. It's eye opening.
 
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