And has it worked for you? I’ve heard from some people that it helps with allergies. Bought a jar today at a local drugstore and just want to see what people have to say.
Actually, you can have an allergic reaction to the pollen in honey.
In any case, honey can’t cure anything that sugar can’t treat also.
Just curious, but in what way are people claiming that raw honey helps with allergies? What is the mechanism or interaction?
I eat raw honey, but only because I like the taste. I actually like all honey, but I’ve never heard about the allergy thing.
It’s natural and unprocessed! :rolleyes:
[Jack Nicholsen]You want the honey?! You can’t handle the honey![/Jack Nicholsen]
http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/90594.php
I see the authors point. It’s long been known that exposing people to allergens can build up a resistance to them. But, there’s also a small risk. Obviously people with asthma or other extreme allergic reactions shouldn’t experiment with any home remedy.
I had heard of this and the explanation seems to make sense on the surface at least: the idea is you have to buy local honey… which will contain traces of local pollen (i.e. the stuff you’ll be exposed to in your own environment). The theory being that it’s low-level exposure and will allow you to build up a tolerance to the local allergens - sort of like a tastier version of allergy shots.
Now, whether it works or not, I have no idea… I suspect the effect is rather miniminal. Still, unless someone’s got truly horrible allergies to the local pollens - life-threatening ones - it would seem to be a harmless experiment.
The old fashion cough medicine in my mum’s day was a tablespoon of whiskey, honey and lemon. Sounds kind of like Nyquil huh?
Many, many years ago, I did try this as an experiment. It had no measureable effect on my allergies, and years later I’m still buying tissues by the case.
I’ve also been on pretty much every prescription medicine ever devised, with varying degrees of relief.
Yes, many years ago, when I was a kid, in fact, my mother heard somewhere that eating real honeycomb (not just the honey but the wax too) might help with allergies. I remember the rectangular block of honeycomb, wrapped in cellophane. It was not particularly nice to eat. The honey was too sweet without bread or something, and the wax was, well, wax. I ate it, but I do not recall that that it did my allergies any noticeable good.