Only if the honey is infected with a bad fungus. Left undisturbed, the honey will last indefinitely.
Honey, it stays usable for thousands of years. So it must kill bacteria!
Some fossils can and do last for billions of years.
No. Honey is only produced by the honey bee - Apis Mellifera.
well anything with a higher density than that of honey will sink. Anything with a lower density than that of honey will float.
We have a cypress tree in the back pasture and it has had a honey bee hive in it for the last 5 years.
116 years
Honeycomb will last longer than you will. Don't worry about how long you store honeycomb. Both the wax and the honey will last for thousands of years.
In a sealed jar honey will last indefinitely. Honey has been found in Egyptian tombs which was 2,000 to 3,000 years old and still in good condition. Honey that has been kept for some time tends to go cloudy and thicken. The honey is not 'going off', this is a perfectly normal process where the sugars are starting to crystalize out of solution. You can restore the honey to its original condition by gently warming the jar in a bowl of hot water. Be careful not to overheat the honey because that will spoil it.
Honey is a shelf-stable product, opened or not. It will last indefinitely as long as the honey hasn't been contaminated.
how much are the honey baked hams
Only if the honey is infected with a bad fungus. Left undisturbed, the honey will last indefinitely.
Honey is the only food that never spoils, but many canned and processed foods can last for years before going bad.
Bees have been producing honey for thousands of years.
453,541,589,654 years
Honey is principally sugar, so too much honey is the same as too much sugar -- it will make you fat, with the problems that can lead to. There are no harmful substances in pure honey.
Properly produced and stored honey will last indefinitely. However, jars of honey bought in a supermarket will have a 'use by' date marked on it because that is what people expect. That date is usually about three years in the future but the honey can be kept and used for as long as you want to and it will still be ok to eat. If you have a jar of honey that has 'crystallised', ie has turned hard and white, let it stand in hot water for about two hours and it should revert to its original colour and viscosity.