Tennessee Mountain Locust Honey -Two Pack- Locally Harvested in Tennessee and Smoky Mountains - Acacia Honey - 100% Pure, Raw, and Unpasteurized - Two 16 oz Jars (454g)
Tennessee Mountain Locust Honey originates from a honey bee farm in Del Rio, Tennessee. Del Rio sits along the French Broad River in the Cherokee National Forest. The mountains are not conducive to industry or commercial farming or pesticide spraying making it the ideal location for beekeeping. The honey is not heated or ultra filtered keeping it in it’s true and natural form which reaps not only the maximum amount of nutritional benefits but preserves the true quality taste of the honey as well. This local Tennessee Mountain Locust Honey will become a pantry staple that you and your family will reach for day in and day out.
- ALL-NATURAL: Local Tennessee Mountain Locust Honey is raw, unpasteurized honey in its purest form with no additives. Raw honey is only strained before it's bottled, which means it retains most of the beneficial nutrients and antioxidants that it naturally contains. To get the true array of benefits that honey offers it must be in it’s raw and natural form. The way honey truly is meant to be.
- NUTRITIOUS: Raw honey has a vast antioxidant profile which helps protect your body from cell damage due to free radicals. It also has antifungal and antibacterial properties because it naturally contains hydrogen peroxide, an antiseptic. The benefits of even just consuming a tablespoon a day of honey is wide and vast.
- DELICIOUS: Tennessee Mountain Locust Honey has a sweet delicate flavor with a clean floral aroma and hints of vanilla. This honey in particular is light and easy on the palette which makes it best served as is on top of fruit, granola, cheese, or figs. This would be a perfect and unexpected addition to add to your next charcuterie board.
- ORIGIN: Locust honey is produced by bees who pollinate the flowers of the black locust tree, a tree native to Europe and North America. Locust Honey can be tricky to find at times because the blooms are only present for a couple weeks during the spring and oftentimes rain storms have been known to occur which limits the amount of nectar accessible to the bees.