Full disclosure: I’m a honey consumer, a big-time honey consumer. I make a five-pound jug disappear every 6 to 9 months and I can find legitimate ways to enjoy honey three meals a day. I’m also intrigued about flavored honeys. The only one I ever met that I didn’t like was a buckwheat honey. I ended up diluting that bad boy with clover honey.
I was thrilled to see honey on the bar counters in Abruzzo . . . and even more excited to see the locals using it to sweeten their cappuccini and espressi. As we walked through Sulmona on market day we spotted the Non Solo Miele (Not Just Honey) shop. We popped in and were invited to sample some of the floral varieties, including a complex, slightly bitter, chestnut honey which the proprietor informed us was rich in iron.
I’ve since learned that Abruzzo has been a center of honey production since ancient times. Today a wide variety of blended and monofloral honeys are created by the people and bees in the region. To read more about Abruzzese honeys, visit Discover Abruzzo.
walter sanders says
Barbara,
Thank you for your honey of a note! Your site is beautiful…and your story is amazing!
Barbara Goldfield says
Hello from the Sannio,
What a lovely blog! As a fellow honey lover I thought you might be interested in our upcoming event on June 12th “To Bee or Not To Bee” at http://www.savourthesannio.com/2009/05/04/ancient-traditions-to-bee-or-not-to-bee-sweet-liquid-gold-of-the-sannio/. Best, Barbara