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Sun, 11 Mar 2001 04:40:12 -0700 |
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>> Since we are discussing liquefying honey would someone comment on using
>> solar honey melters? I believe the ABJ discusses building one. Anyone
>> with any experience using these?
>
>We've been talking controlled temperature and the effects on honey. Since
solar
>melters lack controls AFAIK, how much heat are you willing to use?
I have one. It lacks controls, but I only use it for preheating. It holds
two barrels (each one 209 litres = 55 US gallons = 45 imperial gallons.
Having different gallons is a big incentive to go metric), or many pails. I
built it to liquefy barrels of corn syrup which had granulated. However, I
found that it would not do this fast enough in March when I needed them. We
rarely had daytime temps above freezing, and insufficient sun. All sides
are insulated except bottom. South side and top are big thermopanes that I
had salvaged, these are covered with styrofoam at night or sunless
conditions. In summer or fall I can put about 500 kg (1100 pounds) of honey
in it and after one sunny day the honey is fairly well melted (but not
completely). Then I put it in a water jacketed bottling tank with a
thermostat. After two sunny days the honey would be completely melted (I
did this once), but I rotated the pails on the second day (bottom layer to
top and front to back).
I heartily agree with Peter Bray's comment that we are slaves to a North
American market that wants liquid honey. It is worse in eastern Canada than
in the west. I sell three or four times more liquid honey than creamed. I
don't get complaints about overheated honey (but I personally think it IS
overheated). But I do get complaints if honey ever starts to granulate on
the store shelf, both from consumers and retailers.
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