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International, Historic & Member Articles
Historic New Zealand Beekeeping
Historical Taranaki beekeeping...
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<blockquote data-quote="NickWallingford" data-source="post: 11911" data-attributes="member: 44"><p>That whole "let it granulate then grind it up" or "whip the hell out of it" versus "proper" creamed honey will always be there I guess. I must say my tastes are on the creaming processes of the South Island bkprs - starter, temperature control, etc. Allen McCaw did a great presentation of the process at the APINZ Conference a year or so ago.</p><p></p><p>That device of Dudley's certainly sounds like/similar to the one that Allen Bates engineered. I'm not sure I ever saw one in operation. I think it may have been one when visiting Bruce Forsyth (Ohaupo) who had one in an old shed, I think. It seemed to be sort of a gear pump type thing, but not sure how he got the hard-granulated honey into it. </p><p></p><p>I remember David Warr had one of the Bates packing machines he got from someone back then. I wonder who has it now...</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="NickWallingford, post: 11911, member: 44"] That whole "let it granulate then grind it up" or "whip the hell out of it" versus "proper" creamed honey will always be there I guess. I must say my tastes are on the creaming processes of the South Island bkprs - starter, temperature control, etc. Allen McCaw did a great presentation of the process at the APINZ Conference a year or so ago. That device of Dudley's certainly sounds like/similar to the one that Allen Bates engineered. I'm not sure I ever saw one in operation. I think it may have been one when visiting Bruce Forsyth (Ohaupo) who had one in an old shed, I think. It seemed to be sort of a gear pump type thing, but not sure how he got the hard-granulated honey into it. I remember David Warr had one of the Bates packing machines he got from someone back then. I wonder who has it now... [/QUOTE]
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What type of honey is New Zealand famous for?
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