They are relatively simple cookies that often are fairly sweet due to honey infusion and may contain dates mixed into the dough and baked in or placed on top of the honey-cookies after baking as a type of decoration or garnish.
Yes. It is safe to heat and eat honey that shows an expired date on the commercial packaging.
no
The only true food that does not have an experation date is honey...but it does crystalize, not go sour or rot.
If if it 100% natural honey, then it is safe to use. !00 % natural honey has no expiry date. It can go sugary, but warming in hot water or in microwave should bring it back right. Honey has its own antibacterial ingredients that prevent it from ever spoiling
Because the law states that foodstuffs MUST have an expiry date but from your question, you obviously know that pure honey doesn't deteriorate so doesn't need an expiry date.
0% sorry honey
No!!! He has only dated Miley Cyrus!He will never date Amanda.
Because honey its our natural thing
Modern Day Marketing Ploy: The company you bought the honey from wants to encourage you to throw it away after a certain date so that they can sell you some more! They're sneaky! However, pure honey, (not honey that has been thinned with some other liquid) does not go bad. Honey will crystallize after a year or so, and you simply put the honey into a microwave safe container and nuke it until it becomes liquid again. The same thing applies to real Maple syrup, too.
play hard to get and when you are allowed to date make your move honey
I don't understand why a bottle of 80 proof vodka would have and expiry date on it ? everything has to have a sell by date, even honey which will last indefinitely
Honey bees (Apis mellifera) were first introduced to New Zealand by English settlers in the Hokianga, Northland, in 1839.