Saturday, September 8, 2012

6.--Sweeeet! The Honeybee Centre

This past week my eye fell on an online ad for the Tea Hive Café, a little spot nestled comfortably in the Honeybee Centre, located on Fry’s Corner. It was a very small menu indeed, but since I hadn’t been to the Honeybee Centre in ever so long my sister and I decided to go and buy some honey and check the café out.

You have to go. Not just for the pie at the café, which is really, really good, but for the pleasure of looking and testing the different kinds of honey, taking a self-guided tour, and checking out the courses they offer, like beekeeping and candle-making. (By the way, this is a very kid-friendly place.)

We were greeted as we came in the door with a warm smile by Karen Downey, who couldn’t be more enthusiastic about the benefits of honey. She explained that all their honey was unpasteurized; since the honey is not heated up, valuable enzymes in it are not destroyed.

We ordered the apple pie, mine accompanied by a lovely pear green tea, my sister's paired brilliantly with a delicious chai redolent with spices similar to those we traditionally use in apple pie, and then went into the “greenhouse” to sit and wait for our orders to come to us. The place was charming. One side has several tables and chairs and the other has more of a sunroom feel, with small glass-topped tables surrounded by wicker easy chairs. There is a small bookcase with books and magazines you are free to browse through while you wait. A little goldfish pond sits in one corner, pretty with plants, and everywhere there is information about bees and honey.

Karen told us they order the apple pie from a gourmet bakery, and I believe her. It was full of chunks—not slices—of apple. A scoop of vanilla ice cream nestled beside it and both pie and ice cream were drizzled with Rewarewa honey, changing it from good to fabulous. The honey took on the characteristics and flavor profile of caramel. Absolutely delicious. Do try it with the green tea—the sweetness of the dessert off-sets the teas natural mild astringency and makes for a memorable combination.

After our treat we went back into the store area and began tasting the honey at the honey bar set up for just that purpose. Karen explained that the nutrients are different for each honey, depending upon what the bees were feeding on.

Unprocessed honey has antibacterial properties because it contains natural hydrogen peroxide and it has an acid PH. But Manuka honey, for instance, has additional antimicrobial activity because the Manuka bush the bees feed on contains something called methylglyoxal. I didn't like the Manuka honey. It tasted medicine-y to me. I did, however, like the buckwheat honey, which is somewhat reminscent of molasses and is probably amazing in bbq sauce applications, and the clover honey tasted, as my sister so aptly put it, "like our childhood". I remember our mother always buying clover honey. The blueberry and cranberry honeys were amazing. Once we finished tasting we selected a jar each--my sister the cranberry and I, our childhood--and paid for our choices. We were a little sticky. If you go, take wipes.

Karen gave me a couple of brochures (I could do a blog on the Honeybee Centre alone) and let me know about their website. You can visit the website by clicking on this URL:
  www.honeybeecentre.com

Go. Enjoy. Taste honey. Learn about bees. And don't forget to try the apple pie. 

 





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