Wednesday, September 08, 2021

The Way We Were Wednesday - Honey Packers


 If you ever visit a honey packing house, you never forget the smell.  It is honey, and beeswax, and always a little bit of sour fermentation.  Honey diluted with water rapidly begins to ferment.  Honey from a sealed honeycomb, has too little water in it to allow the natural yeasts to ferment, but add a little water and the smell reminds me of my childhood.  

My father took the photo above, in a packing plant in southeast Pennsylvania in the early 1960's.  The square metal cans are each five gallons, about 60 pounds of honey.  Most producers shipped in cans until the early 1960's then changed over to 55 gallon barrels.  I was never in this plant.  I was in one in the Detroit area, and one in south central Michigan,  they both smelled the same.  Lots of our friends growing up, had small scale packing rooms, they all smelled the same.  

My father was raised in the era where honey was a substitute for granulated table sugar, a time when the lighter the color, the milder the flavor, the more desirable it was considered. I disagreed with that, I thought the more complex the flavor the better, color didn't matter.  I would pack darker or oddly flavored honey and he would fuss that it would NEVER SELL, and no one would be happy with it.  It frequently flew off the shelf with requests for more.  We had a location near a maple syrup sugar house (where sap is boiled down to make maple syrup.) One years the bees gathered enough from the sugar house to produce honey with a unique maple flavor. I diverted that to the bottling tank, even my father liked it.  It sold well.  We were unable to repeat that the following year (the theory was that the bees always produced this, what happened that one year was other honey flows came early in the season and the bees didn't consume all of the maple honey, leaving some there for harvest season.) 

Oh well, this photo triggers those smell memories.    

20 comments:

  1. I've never liked the taste of honey, except for honey buns. I find these stories of yours fascinating, though. This makes me feel kind of bad for plucking bees out of the ice plant, using wooden clothespins. We'd grab them through that little hole and drop them off into the spiderwebs. It was interesting to us little, mildly sadistic children to see the spiders run out of their web tunnels and grab the bees. Those spiders were well fed, and probably died of heart attacks. Funnily, I like bees and hate spiders.

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    1. I use very little honey, probably 2 pounds a year. In the honey house, we used a central vacuum system to remove bees in the wrong place. The nasty job was cleaning out the vac at the end of the season.

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    2. Um...ew? Two pounds of honey a year! That's very little? To each their own, I guess. Live and let live. To bee or not to bee, that's a question?

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    3. My parents used 60 pounds a year (five gallons) and kept bringing me cases.

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  2. Oh man do I love honey and would most likely love the smell who describe. I can eat honey by the spoonful. And nothing better on my sore throat when I get one.

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    1. The photo was taken in the late 50's early 60's the company is still in operation https://www.dutchgoldhoney.com/store/

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  3. You have so many fascinating memories (and the experiences to go with them). I’ve never experienced that smell. But I LOVE different kinds of honey and the colors.

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    1. We all have a interesting stories. I am amazed that smells and images are memory triggers for me.

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  4. Carlos loves honey and all kinds, from the milder to the darker. I had no idea about the unique differences in flavors.
    I, personally, am an Agave guy.

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  5. What great memories and a wonderful experience to harvest and pack honey.

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    1. It was an interesting way to grow up

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  6. Nothing evokes memories like smell!

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  7. My, hat off to the bees.
    Honey does have a unique smell.

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    1. Thank you, and welcome to a new commenter

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  8. Anonymous9/08/2021

    I wonder if you will ever smell the honey packing room smell again.

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  9. Brother #3 tells me his first attempt at beehive is booming and soon he will have honey

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    1. How fun. On toast the next time you are there.

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