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Started By
Message
Can refrigerated honey be put back in the pantry?
Posted on 3/12/14 at 6:55 pm
Posted on 3/12/14 at 6:55 pm
Someone put the honey in the fridge.
Can I put it back in the pantry if I leave it out to fall back to room temp?
Can I put it back in the pantry if I leave it out to fall back to room temp?
Posted on 3/12/14 at 6:59 pm to cdaniel76
Yep. And don't put it in the fridge again.
This post was edited on 3/12/14 at 7:00 pm
Posted on 3/12/14 at 6:59 pm to cdaniel76
I don't see why not. I was under the impression that you can't frick up honey
ETA: Nvm, it would crystallize
ETA: Nvm, it would crystallize
This post was edited on 3/12/14 at 7:01 pm
Posted on 3/12/14 at 7:03 pm to dualed
Yeah, it turned into a gelatinous chunk in the fridge. It's in some warm water now.
I know the rule of thumb is honey doesn't spoil, but I wasn't sure if it was safe to be transitioned from cold to hot or the opposite.
I know the rule of thumb is honey doesn't spoil, but I wasn't sure if it was safe to be transitioned from cold to hot or the opposite.
Posted on 3/12/14 at 7:28 pm to cdaniel76
Bread and honey are two foods that belong nowhere near a fridge.
Posted on 3/12/14 at 8:20 pm to Joshjrn
Bread in the fridge lasts longer
Posted on 3/12/14 at 9:00 pm to Joshjrn
quote:
Bread and honey are two foods that belong nowhere near a fridge.
My wife puts bread in the freezer all the time. A load is bread is the cheapest fricking thing we consume and try to ration it to make it last half a year for some reason. All the while, our 12 month old goes through a gallon of milk before a cat can lick its arse. I've gotten to where I refuse to touch the frozen bread. I buy new bread, hot dog buns, and hamburger buns anytime I'm about to cook something that demands their services. I've got one freezer full of nothing but enough bread to feed the entire hood for a week.
Posted on 3/12/14 at 9:04 pm to 4LSU2
I freeze bread, too.
Basically lasts indefinitely.
Basically lasts indefinitely.
Posted on 3/12/14 at 9:11 pm to Hoodoo Man
quote:
I freeze bread, too. Basically lasts indefinitely.
I've got plenty of indefinite bread you're welcome to have.
Posted on 3/12/14 at 9:41 pm to TheIndulger
quote:
Bread in the fridge lasts longer
Does not. Look it up.
Posted on 3/12/14 at 9:43 pm to 4LSU2
Honey will be fine. Just stir it up real good.
My wife use to do the same shite with bread till we got chickens. They eat the stale bread now.
My wife use to do the same shite with bread till we got chickens. They eat the stale bread now.
Posted on 3/12/14 at 9:59 pm to CHEDBALLZ
quote:
My wife puts bread in the freezer all the time. A load is bread is the cheapest fricking thing we consume and try to ration it to make it last half a year for some reason. All the while, our 12 month old goes through a gallon of milk before a cat can lick its arse. I've gotten to where I refuse to touch the frozen bread. I buy new bread, hot dog buns, and hamburger buns anytime I'm about to cook something that demands their services. I've got one freezer full of nothing but enough bread to feed the entire hood for a week.
Posted on 3/12/14 at 10:09 pm to Joshjrn
quote:I always put my bread in the fridge when it passes the 'best buy' date. I hate throwing away food
Bread and honey are two foods that belong nowhere near a fridge.
If I don't, mold always sneaks up on me
This post was edited on 3/12/14 at 10:11 pm
Posted on 3/13/14 at 6:47 am to TigerTatorTots
Only way bread is any good after refrigerated is toast.
Honey is ok in fridge just let it sit and the crystals will dissolve. However when you buy honey you should buy either local or at the least organic honey. Most honey you find in grocery stores is super filtered which means it has virtually no pollen and pollen is what you want. By filtering all of the pollen out you lose most of the "superfood" benefits. You also lose the origin of the honey and most of it comes from China via third party countries. Chinese honey is banned in the United States but the majority sold actually comes from there.
Honey is ok in fridge just let it sit and the crystals will dissolve. However when you buy honey you should buy either local or at the least organic honey. Most honey you find in grocery stores is super filtered which means it has virtually no pollen and pollen is what you want. By filtering all of the pollen out you lose most of the "superfood" benefits. You also lose the origin of the honey and most of it comes from China via third party countries. Chinese honey is banned in the United States but the majority sold actually comes from there.
Posted on 3/13/14 at 8:40 am to cdaniel76
Honey does not need any fridge for storage. It is what is called an invert sugar and will appear as crystalized it is not, but just hot water over the bottle/contained returns it to a liquid state.
Posted on 3/13/14 at 8:51 am to cdaniel76
Honey NEVER goes bad. Archeologists actually ate some that they discovered with Egyptian mummies that was thousands of years old, so I assume you can put it in and out of the fridge as many times as you like.
Honey Facts
Honey Facts
This post was edited on 3/13/14 at 8:53 am
Posted on 3/13/14 at 9:04 am to 4LSU2
quote:
I've got plenty of indefinite bread you're welcome to have.
My wife does that, frozen bread is disgusting
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