Guest guest Posted January 1, 2001 Report Share Posted January 1, 2001 HI, I am not an expert on this but as a beekeeper I have long been interested in this topic. Basically, sugar as we know it is pure sucrose. Brown sugar is the same thing. It just isn't completely refined. When we eat a big bunch of sucrose it will digest all at once and we get an energy burst. I may be a little off here, but it can also affect the need for insulin and the body's reaction to that may be an overdose of insulin. I think that causes one to get tired or drowsy or something. I have found, after a lot of years, that I cannot eat a sugary or starchy meal on the road without getting overpoweringly sleepy in just about 45 minutes. I struggle to keep awake or pull off at the nearest spot where I can and sleep for 15 minutes or so and then I can go again. IIf it isn't too bad I can fight through it and before long I can be driving again with the drowsiness gone. I much prefer to fly or go by bus and sit back and relax. Honey, on the other hand, is a combination of a lot of different sugars that do not digest at the same time and enables one to avoid the energy burst. Some may digest in a short time and some much longer. Honey is also quite variable from flower source to flower soure in the make up of the sugars. Some honeys granulate quickly. Those are much higher in dextrose than those which do not. While diabetics have to be very careful with honey, the sugars that make up Tupelo honey enable most diabetics to use it with care. It is not a cheap honey. This is not a learned or complete treatise on honey. I am just giving some ways in which it is dirrent from table sugar. It is not low in calories. There are some enzymes in honey that has not been heated. The darker the honey the higher in minerals it is and the more nutritious. If you would like an excellent honey that really grows on one, try Buckwheat. There is not as much of as there used to be because Buckwheat acreage is declining. It is a dark brown, strong tasting, delicious honey. Folks that live in Buckwheat country don't think anything else is honey. Most of the stuff you find in stores with a commercial label has been highly refined, clarified, filtered and heated high enough to prevent granulation. I like the " raw " honey better but that is personal. However, I like it all. Of course, today a lot of it is coming from the Orient, South America, etc. Cliff Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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