New Zealand’s favourite honey revealed

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The popularity of Manuka honey has been confirmed in a recent national survey, which places it above Clover and other floral varieties.

In the New Zealand-wide survey launched by Airborne Honey this month to celebrate the country’s first National Honey Week, 40 percent of Kiwis named Manuka as their favourite and 29 percent choose Clover. A number of other floral honeys featured further down the scale, including Vipers Bugloss (three percent) and Rewarewa (2.26 percent).

The survey also revealed that the favoured way to eat honey in New Zealand is on toast (57 percent), followed by a sweetener in hot drinks (nine percent) and straight off the spoon for medicinal purposes (nine percent). Most New Zealanders eat honey once or twice a week with only two percent never eating honey at all.

“Manuka honey has taken a few hits in international and local media this year, which has a lot to do with fraudulent activity overseas. It’s great to see that despite all that, New Zealanders still value, support and enjoy eating Manuka,” says Peter Bray, managing director of Airborne Honey. “It’s also encouraging to see that some of the other, perhaps less well known honeys, such as Vipers Bugloss and Rewarewa have been pinpointed by some Kiwis as being their favourite honey. Hopefully, people will continue to experiment with the full range of floral varieties, instead of just sticking to the tried and trusted favourites. We’re lucky in New Zealand to have so many unique honey types and tastes, ranging from dark, malty and almost savoury to the very light and sweet. There’s a honey for everyone.”

When it comes to shopping for honey, just over half of Kiwis still look for the best value honey on the shelf, with 51 percent looking at the price first. After that, 38 percent buy based on what the honey looks like in the jar, 28 percent look for the label they’re always used to seeing and 26 percent buy based on nutrition and origin information.

“It is entirely understandable and not at all surprising that New Zealanders are shopping around for the best deal,” says Mr Bray. “Many people, especially those with families to feed, have a tight food budget. Having said that, the fact that shoppers aren’t paying much attention to the information on the label does suggest that many don’t fully understand or appreciate how to shop for a genuine, nutritious, quality honey product. It’s important to understand that going for the cheapest option can sometimes be a false economy. If possible, buy a honey that can prove that it is what it claims on the jar (type of honey etc) and is not heat damaged. Otherwise, you are likely to be disappointed with the taste and it will not provide the nutritional qualities that honey should do.”

The most pleasing result from the survey for Mr Bray, whose family has worked in the New Zealand honey industry for more than 100 years, is that most Kiwis are still eating honey on a weekly basis.

“The fact that New Zealanders are eating honey regularly with very few not eating it at all is just further confirmation that we’re a honey-loving nation with higher consumption per head (1.65 kilos per annum) than anywhere else in the world,” says Mr Bray. “The people that founded the honey industry in New Zealand, including my great grandfather, William Bray, who started Airborne Honey, would be over the moon.”

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