So dumb question...after reading this thread would I be wasting my money if I bought a 60lb bucket of Orange Blossom honey (Monarch) from a restaurant supply company? Would it be garbage honey?
I wouldn't say it would be garbage. It would probably be Orange Blossom honey. But the question is if you'd like it.
It's common in the honey industry for domestic buyers to request samples. Say I have 200 lbs of Sourwood honey. The buyer will ask me to send a 2 oz or so sample. Depending on the type and the buyer, the'll either just taste it, or they'll send it to have pollen analysis to confirm 51%+ is from Sourwood trees. A higher percentage might yield a higher price (although lately less often). And/or they'll send it to a lab for chemical analysis, to determine if it's adulterated or there are any chemical residues (which happens, rarely but it does, sometimes because a beekeeper is stupid but more often than not the bees gather nectar from places that aren't the best . . .they're scavengers after all, even if they are really good scavengers). If both tests (if they did it) come back good, they'll taste it to confirm if they like it. Sometimes it's true sourced honey that isn't adulterated, but it just tastes like junk (usually due to the soil content of the area where the bees collected their honey, which occasionally will leave iron or other trace minerals in the nectar that end up in the honey and make it taste "different"). Moisture content, humidity, temp all are large factors on the flavor as well. Plus no honey is actually 100% true to source, so what mix it actually is has an impact as well. If it checks all three boxes, the buyer asks how much is left left and negotiates a price.
Sometimes one, two, or all three steps are skipped, depending on the buyer, the need, the market, and the type of honey. An experienced buyer can sometimes check the moisture content of the honey (quick and easy with a refractometer), give it a taste, and through the color and taste be able to tell if it's
likely adulterated and likely true sourced. If so, and it tastes good, they buy it without lab analysis. That happens too. But it depends on the type of honey.
Doesn't mean you can't do the same. Although pollen analysis I think runs about $50 or so, chemical analysis is a little more. Doesn't make much sense when you buy 60 lbs. But honey never goes bad (they found honey in Egyptian tombs, literally thousands of years old, and was still good to eat), although it may crystalize and will get darker over time. So buy in bulk and get it tested if you want. Or just taste it and decide if you like it before you buy it. That's what I'd do.