Natural Honey Comb

$15.00

Honeycomb is made by honeybees to store honey and pollen or house their larvae. Honeybees also use it to keep pollen and store pollen. Honeycombs are made of hexagonal cells made of beeswax, which usually contain raw honey. Raw honey has not been pasteurized or filtered, so it differs from commercial honey.

Honeycomb may also contain bee pollen, propolis, and royal jelly, three bee products known to have their health benefits. However, these three bee products are unlikely to be as plentiful as honey.

Honeycomb can be eaten whole, including the waxy cells surrounding it and the honey inside. The textured consistency of raw honey differs from that of filtered honey. Furthermore, raw honey has waxy cells that can be chewed like gum.

Note: Children under the age of 1 should not have honey.

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Honeycomb is made by honeybees to store honey and pollen or house their larvae. Honeybees also use it to keep pollen and store pollen. Honeycombs are made of hexagonal cells made of beeswax, which usually contain raw honey. Raw honey has not been pasteurized or filtered, so it differs from commercial honey.

Honeycomb may also contain bee pollen, propolis, and royal jelly, three bee products known to have their health benefits. However, these three bee products are unlikely to be as plentiful as honey.

Honeycomb can be eaten whole, including the waxy cells surrounding it and the honey inside. The textured consistency of raw honey differs from that of filtered honey. Furthermore, raw honey has waxy cells that can be chewed like gum.

Note: Children under the age of 1 should not have honey.

Honeycomb is made by honeybees to store honey and pollen or house their larvae. Honeybees also use it to keep pollen and store pollen. Honeycombs are made of hexagonal cells made of beeswax, which usually contain raw honey. Raw honey has not been pasteurized or filtered, so it differs from commercial honey.

Honeycomb may also contain bee pollen, propolis, and royal jelly, three bee products known to have their health benefits. However, these three bee products are unlikely to be as plentiful as honey.

Honeycomb can be eaten whole, including the waxy cells surrounding it and the honey inside. The textured consistency of raw honey differs from that of filtered honey. Furthermore, raw honey has waxy cells that can be chewed like gum.

Note: Children under the age of 1 should not have honey.