Seed to Supper Database
Honey
Storage Guide"Nature's sweetener that never spoils and never stops giving."
View All Honey RecipesHoney is the only food that truly never expires — archaeologists found 3,000-year-old honey in Egyptian tombs that was still edible. In a budget kitchen, one jar sweetens your tea, glazes your chicken, soothes a cough, and heals a scrape. There's nothing else like it.
4
Parts Mapped
Every piece accounted for
31
Total Uses
Nothing wasted
6
Preservation Methods
Year-round supply
Shelf Life (unopened)
Indefinite — honey never spoils
Shelf Life (opened)
Indefinite (may crystallize but still good)
Best Storage
Room temperature, sealed, away from moisture
Avg Price
$5-8/lb (grocery), $8-15/lb (local raw)
💡 Grandmaw's Tips
Never give honey to babies under 1 year old — it can contain botulism spores that their little systems can't handle yet.
Raw honey has more beneficial enzymes and pollen than pasteurized. Pasteurized is fine for cooking, but raw is better for eating straight.
To measure honey without the mess, spray your measuring cup or spoon with cooking spray first — it slides right out.
Honey is slightly acidic, which is why it works so well to balance rich, fatty, or salty dishes. Think of it as a flavor bridge.
One hive of bees makes about 60 pounds of honey a year. When you buy local, you're keeping those pollinators working in your community.
Every item below works beautifully with honey.
🥩 Proteins
Chicken thighs
Pork tenderloin
Salmon
Bacon
Ham
Eggs
Shrimp
Ground turkey
Chicken wings
Tofu
Peanut butter
🥬 Vegetables
Sweet potato
Carrots
Butternut squash
Brussels sprouts
Corn
Beets
Onion
Green beans
Acorn squash
Bell pepper
🌿 Herbs
Thyme
Rosemary
Mint
Lavender
Ginger root
Basil
Sage
🧂 Spices
Cinnamon
Ginger
Garlic
Cayenne pepper
Cumin
Black pepper
Nutmeg
Chili flakes
Cardamom
Turmeric
🧀 Dairy
Butter
Cream cheese
Yogurt
Ricotta
Goat cheese
Brie
Mascarpone
Heavy cream
🫙 Pantry
Soy sauce
Apple cider vinegar
Mustard
Olive oil
Oats
Lemon juice
Walnuts
Sesame oil
Flour
Brown sugar
Rice
Tea bags
Peanut butter
Here's how to keep honey all year long.
🫙 Pantry Storage (Original Jar)
Indefinite
Best for: Everyday use — cooking, baking, sweetening, drizzling
💡 Honey is already preserved. That's the whole point. Just keep the lid on and a dry spoon in your hand, and it'll outlast you.
🧊 Freezing
Indefinite
Best for: Bulk storage when you find a great deal or harvest from your own hive
💡 Honey won't freeze solid — it gets thick like taffy. Portion into smaller jars before freezing so you're not thawing the whole batch.
🍶 Infused Honey
6-12 months
Best for: Gift-giving, specialty cooking, flavored teas, charcuterie boards
💡 Warm honey gently, add dried lavender, chili flakes, vanilla bean, or rosemary. Strain after 1-2 weeks. Makes a $2 jar feel like a $15 gift.
🥫 Honey Syrup
2-4 weeks (refrigerated)
Best for: Cocktails, iced tea, lemonade, coffee — dissolves instantly in cold drinks
💡 Mix equal parts honey and warm water, stir until dissolved, bottle, and refrigerate. Grandmaw called this 'liquid gold for iced tea season.'
🍯 Creamed / Whipped Honey
Indefinite (room temperature)
Best for: Spreadable honey for toast, biscuits, and gifting
💡 Mix 1 part already-creamed honey (your 'seed') with 9 parts liquid honey, stir daily for a week at cool room temp. It sets into a smooth, spreadable butter.
🫗 Fermented Honey (Mead Starter)
Months to years (improves with age)
Best for: Homemade mead, honey vinegar, fermented garlic honey
💡 Peel garlic cloves, submerge in honey in a jar, burp daily. In 2-4 weeks you've got fermented garlic honey that's incredible on pizza and bread. The honey itself becomes a cooking sauce.
Seed to Supper to Seed
Nothing leaves the cycle. Everything comes back around.
🛒
Buy a jar of local raw honey or stock up on store brand during a sale
🍯
Store at room temperature in a sealed jar — it never expires
🍳
Cook with it — glazes, marinades, dressings, baking, sweetening
🫖
Stir into tea, coffee, oatmeal, or warm lemon water daily
🧴
Use for skin care, hair treatments, and minor wound care
🌱
Dip plant cuttings in honey as a natural rooting hormone
🍶
Make infused honeys, fermented garlic honey, or honey syrup
🫙
Rinse the 'empty' jar with warm water for the garden or one last cup of sweet tea — nothing wasted