Abstract

Honey is a valuable food for its beneficial nutritional and dietetic effects. The quality of honey fluctuates considerably according to various criteria, the adulteration of honey with cheaper substitutes is not negligible. The quality of honey in the market chain with honey taken from beekeepers was compared in this study. A total of 10 samples from each group were tested for basic qualitative markers and compared with legislative criteria. The samples were analysed for fructose and glucose content, water content, titratable acidity and two tests for illegal sugar additions. The results revealed the addition of 25% of the technical syrup in one sample of honey from the market chain, one sample had the sum of fructose and glucose 56,3%, it is below the required limit 60% (differed by 6,3%). In other parameters the samples complied with the valid legislation. All tested parameters in honey from beekeepers met the criteria of the legislation, only 1 sample of blossom honey had the sum of fructose and glucose just below the required limit. The sum of fructose and glucose in this sample was 58.3 %, it differed by 2.9% from the required content of 60%. Sensory analysis was used to assess four samples of honey from beekeepers collected by different techniques. Results have not shown significant difference in sensory properties between manually pressed honey and honey obtained after whirling. The responses characterizing the favourable sensory properties of the examined honey samples were prevailing. The difference between the perception of honey after whirling and honey harvested by press manually was not demonstrated in sensory properties.

Highlights

  • Honey is a sweet primary product of bees (Apies family) used from history as a food source, as a sweetener, and for other purposes, including therapeutic use

  • The results revealed the addition of 25% of the technical syrup in one sample of honey from the market chain, one sample had the sum of fructose and glucose 56,3%, it is below the required limit 60%

  • The group A honey samples from market chain consists of 7 samples of blossom honey and 3 samples of honeydew honey

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Honey is a sweet primary product of bees (Apies family) used from history as a food source, as a sweetener, and for other purposes, including therapeutic use. Composition of honey depends on many parameters and may be different according type (blossom or honeydew), pollen collection locality, season, variety of flora and according to the method of honey harvesting and post-harvest handling, including storage. Honey contain many nutritionally important chemical components, such as sugars, oligosaccharides, organic acids, enzymes, minerals, polyphenols, vitamins and aminoacids with important functions in human nutrition, or treatment and prevention of various diseases. The main components of honey are sugars. Monosaccharides, fructose and glucose forms about 70 % of sugar content, disaccharides, trisaccharides and oligosaccharides forms the rest, about 10 % of carbohydrates of honey (Miguel et al, 2017).

Objectives
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call