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- On many occasions, archeologists have found thousands of years old honey that had still not gone bad.
- And there are many reasons why honey can go on forever without spoiling.
- Reason 1: Honey is hygroscopic (tends to absorb moisture from the air).
- Because of this property, honey dehydrates the bacteria by drawing water out of them.
- Reason 2: Honey is 80% sugar.
- Honey is mostly sugar and water, but the quantity of water is significantly less.
- And most bacteria or microorganisms need moisture to survive.
- E.g., you don’t need to refrigerate dry, uncooked rice but once cooked, the rice must be kept in the fridge within a few hours, or it would spoil.
- So, honey doesn’t provide a supportive environment for bacteria to survive and reproduce.
- Reason 3: Honey is highly acidic (it has a pH between 3 and 4.5).
- pH is short for potential of Hydrogen — A pH number measures, from 0 to 14, how acidic or alkaline something is — anything above 7 is alkaline, and anything below 7 is acidic.
- Most bacteriaSome survive in very acid conditions also and can survive pH of 1 as well. These are called acidophilus survive and thrive in pH of 6.5 to 7 (that is why bacteria love moisture — water has a pH of 7).
- Reason 4: Honey contains hydrogen peroxide (we use this stuff to heal wounds).
- Honey starts out as nectar that bees suck from flowers and store in a special honey stomach (bees have two stomachs), which has special enzymes that start converting the nectar into honey.
- When at the beehive, the bee vomits this enzyme-treated nectar into another bee’s mouth, which then vomits into the other bee’s mouth, and so on.
- This process breaks down the nectar into two by-products, one of which is Hydrogen Peroxide, which is considered the perfect barrier against infection for wounds.
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Image courtesy of Arwin Neil through Unsplash
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