Honey, to find,
when Bees are seen.
Dredge as many
bees as you can, with flour from a pepper-box; or else catch one of them, tie a
feather or a straw to his leg, which can easily be done (natives thrust it up
into his body), throw him into the air, and follow him as he flies slowly to
his hive; or catch two bees, and turning them loose at some distance apart, search
the place towards which their flights converge. But if bees are too scarce for
either of these methods, choose an open place, and lay in it a plate of syrup
as a bait for the bees; after one has fed and flown away again, remove the
plate 200 yards in the direction in which he flew; and proceed in the same sort
of way, until the nest is found.
I am
delighted to have found this little story, as I do not think I have given honey
sufficient space in this blog to date. Today’s recipe source is a twenty page pamphlet
from the Canada Department of Agriculture, Honey
and Some of the Ways in Which it May be Used, (Ottowa, 1936.) The pamphlet was
written for ‘the country housewife, especially those who produce their own
honey’, and who pose the question ‘Can we use the honey we produce, but cannot
sell, in place of sugar, which we have to buy?’
The pamphlet
gives some general rules by which any recipe may be adapted to the use of
honey.
1. Measure
honey always in the liquid form. If it is granulated, heat over warm water
until liquid.
2. For
every cup of honey used, reduce the liquid called for in the recipe by
one-fifth.
3. One
cup of honey is as great in sweetening power as one cup of sugar.
4. Use
¼ to ½ teaspoon of soda to each cup of honey.
5. Increase
the amount of salt by ⅛ to ¼ teaspoon.
6. When
substituting honey for sugar in cake, reduce the liquid of the recipe by
one-fifth and use half honey and half sugar. Fruit cake is an exception to the
rule and all honey may be used.
7. In
milk puddings, pie fillings, etc., add the honey with the thickening agent – eg
flour, cornstarch etc.
Sir
Frederick does not provide recipes as such, in his book, so I have no idea how
he would have used the honey – probably to sweeten tea, or perhaps to spread on
bread, but almost certainly not in recipes like the following, taken from the
Canadian pamphlet.
Honey Snaps.
½ cup honey
1 cup sifted
pastry flour
1 teaspoon
vanilla
½ cup butter
⅔ cup granulated
sugar
¼ teaspoon
salt.
Heat the
honey to boiling point, add the butter and let it melt. Carefully add the mixed
and sifted dry ingredients, combining so that there are no lumps, add
flavouring and drop from a teaspoon onto a well-buttered baking sheet. Bake in
a slow oven, 300 degrees Fahrenheit, for 10 to 15 minutes, or until thin and
bubbly and nicely browned.
Remove from
the oven, allow to cool a little, just enough that the wafers may be pulled
from the baking sheet, and roll with the top side out. If the wafers become too
hard to roll, place the baking sheet in the oven for a few minutes.
Quotation for the Day.
Bees sip
honey from flowers and hum their thanks when they leave.
Rabindrath Tagore.
2 comments:
Wow, I'm glad I don't have to tie a feather to a bee's leg to find honey. Also, when was it known that foraging bees are female?
It's possible that he searched for honey as an addition to his medical kit. Honey used to be used as a dressing for open wounds, because it is antiseptic and aided in healing. I believe the antiseptic property is partly due to its acidity -- the reason for adding soda to recipes where it has substituted for sugar.
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