🍯 More than just sweetness: Honey – A superfood balancing health and ecology
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Honey is one of humankind's oldest natural products. It not only sweetens our tea and muesli, but also boasts a fascinating history, health benefits, and a deep connection to nature. But how healthy is it really, and what responsibility do we bear when consuming it?
🌟 1. Health and benefits: What makes honey so special?
Honey is a complex mixture of sugar, water, enzymes, vitamins, minerals, and trace elements. However, its medicinal properties are primarily due to two characteristics:
A. Natural antibiotic effect
Honey contains an enzyme called glucose oxidase , which bees add to the nectar. This enzyme produces small amounts of hydrogen peroxide upon contact with moisture – a mild antiseptic.
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Application: Medical-grade honey (often Manuka honey) is used particularly in wound healing. It has a disinfectant effect, keeps the wound moist, and promotes regeneration.
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Coughs and colds: Honey can soothe a cough by forming a protective film over irritated mucous membranes. The WHO recommends it as a cough suppressant, especially for children over one year old.
B. Tolerability and ingredients
Honey consists mainly of the simple sugars fructose and glucose (approx. 80%). This makes it more digestible than conventional table sugar (sucrose).
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Since the sugars are already broken down into simple sugars, the body has to do less digestive work to absorb them.
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It also provides small amounts of vitamins (e.g. B vitamins), minerals (e.g. potassium) and antioxidants , the amount of which varies depending on the type of honey (dark honey > light honey).
Attention, young children: Honey should never be given to children under 12 months old . It can contain spores of the bacterium Clostridium botulinum , which can cause botulism in the still-developing intestines of infants.
🌿 2. The ecological benefits and the responsibility
Perhaps the most important aspect of honey production lies not in the jar on our table, but in the role of the producers: the honeybee ( Apis mellifera ).
A. Indispensable pollinator
The main service provided by honeybees is the pollination of cultivated and wild plants. Around 80% of native cultivated and wild plants depend on pollination by bees. Without them, there would be significantly less fruit, vegetables, and oilseeds.
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The beekeeper protects nature: The targeted keeping and care of bee colonies by beekeepers contributes directly to maintaining biodiversity and yield security in agriculture.
B. Environmental consequences: Origin matters
When we buy honey, we make a decision that can have far-reaching ecological consequences:
| aspect | Consequences of mass production / import | Advantages of regional honey |
| transport | High CO₂ emissions due to long transport routes (e.g. China, Mexico, Ukraine). | Minimal transport distances, small ecological footprint. |
| Plant protection products | Risk of pesticide or antibiotic residues in honey, especially in regions with intensive agriculture. | Often stricter controls and knowledge of the local flora by the beekeeper. |
| Bee health | Risk of adulteration (feeding with sugar water), which can weaken the natural resistance of the colonies. | The focus is on healthy, locally adapted populations that strengthen the local ecosystem. |
⚖️ Conclusion: Conscious consumption is the key
Honey is a wonderful natural product with proven benefits for our health and an indispensable ecological benefit.
Your contribution counts:
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Choose regional products: Support local beekeepers. By doing so, you not only promote bee health, but also pollination in your immediate surroundings.
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See it as medicine: Use honey consciously for its antibacterial and cough-suppressing effects, instead of viewing it as a mere sugar substitute.
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Pay attention to quality: Beekeepers with quality seals or organic certification often guarantee higher standards regarding animal welfare and residue-free products.
By consciously buying regional honey, we not only do something good for ourselves, but also actively support the pollinators that secure our food supply and our landscapes.