Robinia honey
Description
Moritz Seidler’s colonies are spread across several locations in Berlin, from the center to the eastern outskirts of the city. For other varieties, he also takes the colonies into the surrounding countryside, to rapeseed fields or close to patches of buckwheat. Moritz is fascinated by the nuances of individual locations, the influence of the soil and individual plant varieties, and the differences between years. That’s why he also deliberately spins the combs from the individual hives without mixing them afterwards with the varietal honey from another location – because that’s the only way to compare each individual honey.
For Moritz, honey is the essence of its environment. He takes great pleasure in making tangible these subtleties of taste.
The robinia honey from Bien Imkerei comes from the Baruther Urstromtal, which runs South of Berlin amidst the large coniferous forests of the lower Fläming and the Luckenwalder Heide. Robinia yields a liquid, lovely honey with a floral aroma that is both subtle and beguiling.
Moritz’s bees live in wooden hives where they build their own combs. Once Moritz extracts the honey, he returns the combs to the bees, provided the quality of the wax is up to par. In nature, bee colonies reproduce by swarming. As a rule, a hive starts to swarm when there are enough bees, brood and stores and they begin to run out of space within their hive. The bees then create so-called swarm cells to start raising new queens. But before these young queens hatch, the old queen leaves with some of the bees to look for a new home.
In the city, this is rather more challenging than in the countryside – and requires some extra work of the beekeeper. For this reason, beekeepers try to guide or even prevent swarming. Just how they go about this is a matter of individual philosophy and makes for quite some disagreements among the trade. Moritz’s strategy is to keep the brood nest compact so that the bees can keep warm more easily. He also likes to keep them busy, so they’re less motivated to go swarming elsewhere.
200g jar
german bee honey
Brennwert | 0 kJ / 0 kCal |
Fett | 0 g |
davon gesättigte Fettsäuren | 0 g |
Kohlenhydrate | 0 g |
davon Zucker | 0 g |
Eiweiß | 0 g |
Salz | 0 g |