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Category: Honey News

Honey can be Vegan

Posted by Brian at 11:32 AM on February 02, 2010 Comments comments (0)

From a letter to a friend about the Vegan honey debate,

Our honey is raw, I never have it hotter than the normal temperature range inside a hive. I normally extract honey on warm summer days so it flows without needing to be heated. I also sell other products like comb honey, which is about as raw as you can get.

It is my feeling, that my beekeeping practice of putting the bee first makes my honey vegan:

My primary goal is to make more bees and to keep them alive. So if one hive is having a slow year and doesn't make enough honey to survive the winter, I transfer some from a hive that did very well. So the hives help each other by sharing their honey. If there is a surplus after all the hives have been given enough to get them through to the spring, then I take my share, and harvest.

After all honey has been harvested I feed the bees, so they can avoid eating their winter stores as long as possible. I'm sure this might not be the case for commercial beekeepers who have several thousand hives.

Vegans argue they honey bee is exploited by the beekeeper, that the bees are the beekeepers slaves. I actually feel the opposite sometimes.

1. The bees are free to come and go, and sometimes they do leave (swarm)

2. The bees are fed pollen and sugar by me in periods when they can't get their own food. I purchased 1500lbs of sugar to feed them last year.

3. They are not forced to do work, they work various jobs on their own accord. They work to feed themselves as any free spirit does.

4. I give them a clean and dry home at great cost to myself. I repair their home if it is damaged or needs paint.

5. If a predator like a raccoon is attacking them I will defend them. I trapped one last year and let it go in a park 25 miles away.

I also sell bee pollen, a super food. Bees use it as the protein source of their diet. It is a super food because it has the highest protein concentration per ounce than any other food source. It's also vegetarian since it comes from flowers. Many people like it to pre-expose their body to pollen before allergy season.

 

Lastly, I'll say a beekeeper can live in a symbiotic relationship with his bees, though not all beekeepers are. Some beekeepers might exploit their bees, such as taking too much honey at the end of a year. Such a practice is also not sustainable beekeeping. A symbiotic relationship with bees is not the same as those that exploit them. I stand firm in saying a symbiotic relationship provited Vegan honey. So some honey is vegan, and some honey is not. 

Insurers Sued for $1 Billion for Allegedly Enabling 'Dumping' of Food Products From China

Posted by Brian at 12:26 AM on February 01, 2010 Comments comments (0)

"What do fresh garlic, crawfish meat, canned mushrooms and honey have in common? A $1 billion lawsuit by their domestic producers against major insurance companies for enabling the "dumping" of competing food products from China.

The domestic producers, represented by the Washington, D.C., office of New York's Kelley Drye & Warren and by Washington's Adduci, Mastriani & Schaumberg, filed the class action in the U.S. Court of International Trade, charging that the insurance companies posted "surety bonds" that allowed importers to bring in food products from China at below cost, or "dumped" prices, causing the domestic producers severe financial harm. Sioux Honey Association v. Hartford, No. 09-00141.

The lawsuit also claims that the U.S. Customs and Border Protection and the U.S. Department of Commerce failed to enforce four anti-dumping orders issued years ago to protect the domestic producers from dumped Chinese imports.

Named as defendants in the billion-dollar lawsuit are the Hartford Cos., Lincoln General, Washington International, American Home Assurance, Great American Insurance Cos. and International Fidelity.

The complaint states that from May 1998 until August 2006, the insurers negligently issued hundreds of customs surety bonds that guaranteed the payment of any dumping duties the government might determine were owed by U.S. importers for the specified Chinese goods.

"Without these customs surety bonds, the importers could not have brought in and sold the Chinese goods in the U.S. market at steeply dumped prices," said Michael Coursey, a partner in Kelley Drye's international trade practice group. "The dumping of these imports forced the domestic producers to significantly lower the prices for their competing products, causing the producers to lose hundreds of millions of dollars."

John Heintz, chairman of Kelley Drye's insurance recovery and Washington litigation practice groups, said the insurers knew or should have known that the importers posed a significantly high risk of defaulting on assessed dumping duties because these importers "were new, thinly capitalized, and had little or no credit history or experience in importing. The insurers, nevertheless for years, continuously issued the bonds on behalf of the importers, and made millions of dollars in premiums."

The importers, they said, have now defaulted on paying hundreds of millions of dollars in dumping duties assessed by the government. The insurers similarly have refused to pay the duties as required by their bonds, and Customs has failed to prosecute any collections lawsuits against the insurers, they added.

The lawsuit states that according to Customs' Web site, that agency has failed to collect 93 percent -- $723 million -- of the $771 million in final anti-dumping duties it assessed under four orders during the past six years. To date, the suit adds, Customs has not filed any collection lawsuits against the insurers for recovery of those duties, and "it is unlikely that any [insurer-defendant] will perform as promised under any of its new shipper bonds without the intervention of this Court on behalf of the] Plaintiffs and the Class."

The government, according to Coursey and Heintz, is legally obligated to distribute to the competing domestic producers any dumping duties ultimately paid by the importers or the insurers. The government's failure to collect these duties from either the importers or the insurers, they contend, has resulted in huge losses for the domestic producers."

Marcia Coyle

The National Law Journal

April 08, 2009

Hanukkah Honey Indulgence

Posted by Brian at 09:06 AM on December 16, 2009 Comments comments (0)

One favorite Hanukkah indulgence is the fried honey puff. These sugared balls of fried dough are popular at Sephardic Hanukkah celebrations and are an excellent treat to add to the menu for the last nights of the holiday. A batter prepared with yeast gives the pastry a light and airy texture, very similar to a doughnut when fried. However, it is the honey coating that gives these puffs their exclusive flavor. A glaze made of honey, lemon juice and sugar ice the puffs just after frying, sealing in their delectable flavor with a slightly crisp outer shell. A smattering of cinnamon completes the dessert, offering a lovely winter spiciness that mingles so well with the flavor of the honey.

Recipe:

Yield: about 36

Batter

  • 1 (2 1/4 teaspoon) packet active dry yeast

  • 1 cup warm water

  • 1/2 teaspoon sugar

  • 1 large egg

  • 2 cups unbleached all-purpose flour

  • 1/4 teaspoon salt

Honey Syrup

  • 1 cup sugar

  • 3/4 cup cold water

  • 1/2 cup honey

  • 1 tablespoon lemon juice

Plus cinnamon to garnish

  1. For the batter, mix together the yeast, 1/2 c of warm water, and the sugar. Let mixture rest for 5 minutes or until it is foamy. Stir in the remaining batter ingredients, including water, until smooth. Cover the bowl loosely with plastic wrap and let batter rise for 1 hour.
  2. While the batter rises prepare the honey syrup. Mix all ingredients together in a large saucepan and slowly bring to a boil over medium-high heat, stirring only until the sugar dissolves. Lower the heat and boil the syrup for 5 minutes. Remove from the heat and set aside to cool.
  3. When the batter has risen, stir it down. Heat oil, about 1 1/2 inches deep, in a large pan until it is about 375 degrees. Dip a teaspoon into the oil, and then use the spoon to scoop up some batter and gently slide batter into the oil. The batter will quickly puff up to almost twice its original size. Continue making puffs but do not crowd the pan. Turn puffs with a slotted spoon until they are browned on all sides and very crisp.
  4. Drain them on paper towels or a wire rack, then drop them into the syrup to coat. Sprinkle the puffs with cinnamon and serve immediately.

Outlook not so sweet for honey giant

Posted by Brian at 09:01 AM on December 16, 2009 Comments comments (0)

"AUSTRALIA'S biggest commercial honey group, Capilano Honey, has warned it will lose about $2 million in the first half of the financial year, a slide back into the red that could jeopardise its attempts to meet a $10 million debt deadline in March.

Capilano, close to launching a rights issue, said yesterday that worsening exchange rates for exporters and shrinking honey supplies due to drought were to blame.

''International conditions for supply of raw honey remain unpredictable,'' Capilano said. ''These conditions have a material unfavourable impact on Capilano's profit expectations through decreased export revenues and expected 'mark to market' devaluation of assets held in other currencies and higher-than-expected domestic honey prices to secure supply.''

It said the dire environment would force it to retreat from some of its offshore markets, including a large proportion of the Canadian market."

Full Article:

http://www.smh.com.au/business/outlook-not-so-sweet-for-honey-giant-20091216-kxmr.html

 

Further:

Austraia is trying to raise half a million dollars a year for research and development with a new levy plan.

Bee keepers, pollinators and queen bee breeders have agreed to switch from the current levy of 2 cents/kg on honey to a $1 per bee hive.

Australian Honey Bee Industry Council chairman, Lindsay Bourke, says while the industry has voted it through, they still need to figure out the details.

"The state's don't want to collect it and send it off to the commonwealth and if the commonwealth collects it there is a fee," he said.

"We haven't worked that out yet, but it's for Australia's interests and for the bee keeping industry that we all pay our little bit for research and development.

Bill goes after fake honey peddlers

Posted by Brian at 08:57 AM on December 16, 2009 Comments comments (0)

"Consumers stung by falsely labeled honey would get new protections under a bill introduced in the Legislature last week.

The WI state's beekeepers say the proposal would help smoke out supposed "honey" products that actually contain corn syrup or even dangerous antibiotics.

...

Currently, there's no federal or state standard for what constitutes honey. The bill would provide one by adopting a definition of honey set by a joint commission of the United Nations and the World Health Organization as pure honey with no additives. It would also set up a process for the state to certify the products of state beekeepers like Fulton as pure Wisconsin honey - with the costs covered by placing fees on the producers and stretching existing agency budgets."

Full Article:

http://host.madison.com/wsj/news/local/govt_and_politics/article_30934c82-e525-11de-ac76-001cc4c03286.html

2008 to 2009 honeybee death rate rises around the world

Posted by anonymous at 03:52 PM on May 04, 2009 Comments comments (0)

A dark clowd decents upon the beekeeping industry, but this isn't a new swarm blocking out the sun as they search out a new home, this is death and absence.

 

The results from the NJ beekeepers winter loss survey indicates the death rate has doubled during the winter of 2008 when compared to the winter of 2007.

 

The Death toll rises in the EU. Pesident of Apimondia, Gilles Ratia states "with this level of mortality, European beekeepers can only survive another 8 to 10 years."

 

Death knell sounds for Europe's beekeepers

Read the full article here:

http://www.vancouversun.com/Technology/Death+knell+sounds+Europe+beekeepers/1538337/story.html

 

It states losses reached 50% in Slovenia and as high as 80% in southwest Germany.

Throw a Green Dinner Party! & Love Your Skin

Posted by douglasfarm at 11:58 AM on April 21, 2009 Comments comments (0)

Throw a Green Dinner Party!

http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2009/04/15/earlyshow/living/recipes/main4946088.shtml

"Katie prepared a minted pea soup, fresh mushroom and asparagus springtime pasta, and mini-cheesecakes drizzled with honey.

But when throwing a green dinner party, the food is only half the battle.

There's frequently lots of waste at dinner, especially during the summer, when we eat outside using paper plates and napkins.

But Katie's table was totally green, with everything from the placemats to the centerpiece 100 percent recycled, reusable, or repurposed.

After making the pasta, Katie poured the soup into espresso cups and garnished the dessert with the honey and bee pollen.

Bee pollen is said to strengthen the immune system through its antioxidant properties. It's been claimed that bee pollen improves oxygen uptake and helps accelerate recovery in training. Bee pollen is a mixture of bee saliva, plant pollen, and nectar. Some people take it thinking it has special health-enhancing properties; others take it because they think it acts as a performance booster."

 

Love Your Skin

http://feelgoodstyle.com/2009/04/14/love-your-skin/

"Hands down the best lip balm/gloss I have ever used.  Packed in a jar like a balm, this thick concoction goes on more like a gloss and lasts a super long time.  The light lemony scent is fresh and the added honey makes it sweet and yummy.  Honey is also an effective yet gentle skin repair ingredient, perfect for lips.  Once you try this stuff you will never go back."

Sharing a Taste of Honey, on an International Scale

Posted by douglasfarm at 06:21 PM on February 13, 2009 Comments comments (0)

By GERRI HIRSHEY

Published: November 28, 2008

 

A tasting flight of global honeys is a rare and luxurious indulgence. I sit poised to enjoy like a rich, greedy pasha, unscrewing exotic-looking jars full of liquid amber, a fistful of teaspoons at the ready. Sipping as advised from a palate-cleansing glass of water, I dip spoons lightly and taste deeply. As it rolls toward the throat, the honey is mellow, nuanced and splendidly diverse.

Lithuania is smoky. Jordan is spiced with the tang of yellow star thistle. Japan’s buckwheat soba honey is nearlyas dark as soy and almost savory. The fat spherical jar of Israeli honey, with a comb suspended in its amber liquid, exudes eucalyptus and sunlight. And what of this light yellow sample, thinner than most, with a haunting hint of mint?

“Lower East Side of Manhattan,” offers Andrew Coté, inveterate traveler, beekeeper, collector and curator of this remarkable cache of honeys lining one wall of his kitchen. He tastes the urban honey again. “I’m trying to figure out which weeds grow in lots and alleys there near the rooftop hives to give it that distinctive taste.”

Mr. Coté maintains over 200 hives in Fairfield County and Manhattan and bottles his harvests — about 10 tons’ worth in a good year — labeled Andrew’s Taste-Bud Bursting Local Wildflower Honey. He sells in local farmers’ markets, as well as the one in Manhattan’s Union Square. “I’d like to put some hives in Brooklyn as well,” he says. “Know anybody with a roof or garden there?”

At 37, Mr. Coté seems to have as many passions as a honeybee has assigned tasks in its short, purposeful life. His living room has the poised-for-departure air of a boho bivouac. Mementoes of relentless foreign travel — art, masks, photographs — compete for space with the stuff of biblical constancy: huge plastic buckets of stored honey.

But there is clarity at the heart of the exuberant jumble. Mr. Coté sums his many wanderings, professions and avocations with a single phrase: “I’m an educator.”

He is prone to crunch his résumé to “high school dropout and vagabond turned Fulbright scholar and professor.” This is indeed the case; after leaving Brien McMahon High School here, he traveled from Europe through North Africa and Asia for five years. On his return, he finished high school and college in programs from Ecuador to Japan to Long Island and won a Fulbright scholarship to pursue teaching methodologies.

He is now an assistant professor at Housatonic Community College in Bridgeport, where he teaches English as a second language for nine months a year, and travels the remaining three for his most recent educational project, a new nonprofit aid program. Bees Without Borders teaches beekeeping techniques in impoverished areas around the world. The group’s first fund-raiser in October raised more than $3,800, but thus far, Mr. Coté’s work overseas is largely self-funded.

“I earn zero working for Bees Without Borders. It’s not a sustainable operation,” he says. “Our goals are very modest. We just want to help indigenous beekeepers up their income a bit with better hive practices, and by producing value-added products like candles and soaps.”

Keeping bee colonies healthy is also a global concern as these pollinators so critical to world food supplies are increasingly threatened with the still unsolved mystery called colony collapse disorder, which is killing them off.

Mr. Coté gets overseas on his own dime and sleeps on mud floors in beneficiaries’ homes. “It’s not for everyone,” he says. “We’re talking winter in Moldova with nothing to eat but root vegetables.”

In this early stage, Bees Without Borders has two main crusaders on its front lines: Andrew Coté and his father, Norman, a third-generation beekeeper who taught him the art and science in their backyard hives. Norm, as he is known around town, is also a man of multiple enthusiasms, as his son explains: “Norm, who was also a Norwalk firefighter for 31 years, also took care of Martha Stewart’s bees in Westport for 20 years, then taught her how to manage the hives herself at her new place in Bedford.”

Father and son have long been boon traveling companions who tramped together along the classic Coast to Coast Walk of England from St. Bees Head to Robin Hood’s Bay, more than 190 miles. The roots of their rambling philanthropy came through their travels, “just Norm and me, going to Guatemala, seeing beekeepers and looking at their work,” Mr. Coté says.

Diplomatically, they pointed out some areas for improvement: “Some had no good water source for the bees, others weren’t placing hives to the best advantage, or were discarding bee byproducts, like wax, which could yield more profit.”

Often, circumstances for honeybees and humans are all too grim. In 2005, under the auspices of the United States Agency for International Development, which extends assistance to countries recovering from disasters, Mr. Coté volunteered to go to Iraq, where native species of all kinds have suffered the impact of war. His travels to Basra, Baghdad, Mosul and Kirkuk turned up an alarming statistic you will not see in any government briefings on Iraq.

“Before the 1991 Gulf War, there were an estimated half a million hives in Iraq. After all those oil field fires and smoke, and this current war, there are about 20,000,” he says. “Mobility is extremely limited, and beekeepers can’t get colonies to the citrus groves where they’re needed, or to the lush areas in Kurdistan.”

Bees Without Borders is continuing fund-raising efforts — interested donors can host benefit honey tastings or volunteer with administrative tasks to maintain the group’s global network of beekeepers. Mr. Coté is preparing for a trip in January to Uganda, a war-torn land of abducted child soldiers and desperate refugees. He does not expect that honeybees have escaped the human crises.

“We may not be able to do much more than lay some ground for the future,” he says. “Slowly, well-tended colonies of pollinators can help bring back devastated areas. And honey is always a miracle. It’s the one food on earth that does not spoil. It can be eaten, sold, traded for just the tiniest edge to survive.”

American Airlines redesigns amenity kits for customers in First and Business Classes

Posted by douglasfarm at 05:25 PM on February 12, 2009 Comments comments (0)

American Airlines (NYSE:AMR) has announced that it has made changes to its on-board amenity kits for passengers travelling in First Class and Business Class on the airline's International Flagship Service.

 

 

The changes have been made following feedback from customers, flight attendants and American's Flight Attendant Council. Customers in select markets will have access to the new kits this week, with the roll-out continuing in the following weeks.

 

 

Larger sized cosmetic products will be provided in the amenity kits, including Burt's Bees Naturally Nourishing Milk & Honey Body Lotion, Burt's Bees Beeswax Lip Balm, Colgate toothpaste, a toothbrush with a re-sealable cap, thicker plush socks and larger eyeshades.

 

 

These redesigned kits replace the current amenity kits, which American Airline's has been offering since June 2007.

Honey nebulizer for prevention and inhalation treatment of tuberculosis

Posted by douglasfarm at 02:09 AM on February 02, 2009 Comments comments (0)

Saturday, January 12, 2008

Future Directions for Honey Research

By Ronald Fessenden, MD, MPH
Presented at the 1st International Symposium on Honey and Human Health, January 8, 2008, in Sacramento, Calif.

Most Promising Categories of Research:

? Restorative Sleep
? Memory & Off-line Processing
? Insulin Resistance & Blood Sugar Control
? Immune System Enhancement
? Anti-microbial Effects

Types of Research Needed:

? Human Observational Studies (short term)
? Studies investigating mechanisms of action
? Clinical trials
? Population or Epidemiological Studies*
* Expensive, confounding variables, control cohorts, accidental correlations

Examples of Human Studies:

? Sleep lab studies observing REM sleep / measuring cognitive abilities post-honey dosing vs. no pre-bedtime or other food ingestion
? Expansion of oral honey ?tolerance? tests measuring effects on blood glucose, HA1c, triglycerides, HDL cholesterol, and insulin response compared to glucose, HFCS, artificial sweeteners
? Clinical trials in pre-diabetic, diabetic patients
? Mechanisms of immune system enhancement

Example of New Product:

? Honey nebulizer for prevention and inhalation treatment of tuberculosis, Valley Fever, and other antibiotic-resistant pulmonary infections
? As of January 6, 2008, provisional patents were pending in 3 countries for use of honey in a nebulizer apparatus for such use
? Clinical trials to establish efficacy and treatment protocols will be needed

Conclusions:

? The scientific and medical community should be able to deduce longer term consequences of consuming honey pending the need for population or epidemiological studies
? The potential public health benefit on metabolic diseases such as obesity, childhood obesity, insulin resistance, type II diabetes, cardiovascular disease, and neuro-degenerative diseases could be enormous
? Two years of focused research could have a significant impact on the health of the next generation

Honey Laundering: A sticky trail of intrigue and crime

Posted by douglasfarm at 11:05 AM on January 21, 2009 Comments comments (0)

Source: http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/local/394053_honey30.asp

Tuesday, December 30, 2008

450_honeyxx_inspecti
Meryl Schenker / P-I
Customs Import Specialist Frank McCracken takes a sample of Chinese honey Nov. 5 at a Tacoma Customs warehouse. "This is the most watery sample I've ever seen," he said.

Honey Laundering: A sticky trail of intrigue and crime

Country of origin no guarantee on cheap imports

By ANDREW SCHNEIDER
P-I SENIOR CORRESPONDENT

SULTAN -- Seven cars with darkened windows barreled east toward the Cascades, whizzing past this Snohomish County hamlet's smattering of shops and eateries.

 

The sedans and sport utility vehicles stirred up dust as they rolled into the parking lot of Pure Foods Inc., a Washington honey producer.

Out popped a dozen people in dark windbreakers identifying them as feds -- agents from Homeland Security and Immigration and Customs Enforcement. Some raced to the loading docks. Others hurried through the front door. All were armed.

The man who runs the business, Mike Ingalls, was stunned.

"I just sell honey -- what the hell is this all about?" he remembered asking, as he was hustled into a tiny room with his office manager and truck driver.

Three days before the April 25 raid, customs had persuaded a federal judge in Seattle to issue the search warrant shoved in Ingalls' hands. But it wasn't until Ingalls read "Attachment D" that he understood why investigators were seizing his business records, passport, phone logs, photographs, Rolodexes, mail and computer files -- almost anything that could be copied or hauled away.

 Mike Ingalls
 ZoomMeryl Schenker / P-I
 Mike Ingalls, owner of Pure Foods in Sultan, was raided by Immigration and Customs Enforcement on April 25, but no charges have been filed against him.

He was suspected of trafficking in counterfeit merchandise -- a honey smuggler.

A far cry from the innocent image of Winnie the Pooh with a paw stuck in the honey pot, the international honey trade has become increasingly rife with crime and intrigue.

In the U.S., where bee colonies are dying off and demand for imported honey is soaring, traders of the thick amber liquid are resorting to elaborate schemes to dodge tariffs and health safeguards in order to dump cheap honey on the market, a five-month Seattle P-I investigation has found.

The business is plagued by foreign hucksters and shady importers who rip off conscientious U.S. packers with honey diluted with sugar water or corn syrup -- or worse, tainted with pesticides or antibiotics.

Among the P-I's findings:

 

  • Big shipments of contaminated honey from China are frequently laundered in other countries -- an illegal practice called "transshipping" -- in order to avoid U.S.import fees, protective tariffs or taxes imposed on foreign products that intentionally undercut domestic prices.

     

    In a series of shipments in the past year, tons of honey produced in China passed through the ports of Tacoma and Long Beach, Calif., after being fraudulently marked as a tariff-free product of Russia.

     

  • Tens of thousands of pounds of honey entering the U.S. each year come from countries that raise few bees and have no record of producing honey for export.

     

     

  • The government promises intense scrutiny of honey crossing our borders but only a small fraction is inspected, and seizures and arrests remain rare.

     

     

  • The feds haven't adopted a legal definition of honey, making it difficult for enforcement agents to keep bad honey off the shelves.

     

  • Map

    With threats of border incursions from terrorists and tainted products that can harm or kill people or their pets, why were federal agents swooping down on a honey packer in Sultan?

    For the Food and Drug Administration, it's all about keeping adulterated and possibly hazardous food off grocery shelves.

    For years, China has used an animal antibiotic -- chloramphenicol -- to treat diseases ravaging their beehives. The FDA has banned that drug in any food product.

    Since 2002, FDA has issued three "import alerts" to inspectors at ports and border crossings to detain shipments of tainted Chinese honey. The order in 2002 came after Canadian and European food-safety agents seized more than 80 shipments containing chloramphenicol, which can cause serious illness or death among a very small percentage of people exposed to it.

    In March 2007, U.S. officials revised the alert when Florida food detectives found two other antibiotics -- iprofloxacin and Enrofloxacin -- in honey and blends of honey syrup that originated from China. Last month, FDA also warned that corn or cane sugar may be adulterated -- loaded with honey to increase its bulk or weight and market value.

    "We have continuing safety concerns that center on harmful materials being present in some imported honey. It's not something that can be ignored by FDA," said Martin Stutsman, a senior FDA food-safety officer and the agency's top cop when it comes to adulterated food.

    "The consumer is cheated and the honest manufacturer trying to sell quality products is undercut and has a hard time competing," he said.

    U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement began closely watching honey shipments eight years ago. That's when the Commerce Department's International Trade Commission bowed to pleas from American honey producers and leveled anti-dumping fees on Argentine and Chinese honey being sold for far less than what domestic producers could charge.

    Today, Argentine honey entering this country is taxed an additional 2.2 cents a pound. The tariff on Chinese honey is much stiffer at $1.20 a pound, and some say it's expected to increase.

    Although arrests in such cases remain rare, customs can pursue criminal prosecutions of shippers and importers who launder or falsify the origin of products to avoid paying taxes, duties and other fees.

    The Pacific Northwest is a prosperous portal for Asian honey traders.

    In the fiscal year ending Oct. 1, 60 shipments of foreign honey totaling more than 7.5 million pounds arrived at the ports of Seattle, Tacoma and Portland, records show. All but one came from the Far East. Each year, another $42 million worth of honey comes across the Canadian border from Washington state to North Dakota, customs says.

    Jerry Malmo, border protection's assistant area port director in Seattle, said intercepting illegal foreign shipments is a priority.

    "We've had many problems with honey in the past," he said, "so we do our best to stay on top of it."

    Chinese or Thai?

    At the heart of the investigation into Pure Foods are 973 drums of imported honey worth about a half-million dollars. Most of the unmarked, blue drums were still in their shipping containers at the ports of Tacoma and Seattle when they were seized. But 66 had wrongly been released by customs and were found piled high in Ingalls' outdoor storage area, filled with a rainbow of drums from South America, Canada and Asia.

    Pure Foods, which produces tens of thousands of honey-filled plastic bears a year and sells more in bulk to commercial food manufacturers, routinely imports honey, as does almost every other U.S. honey packer.

    But did the company knowingly break the law by secretly importing Chinese honey?

    The trail for investigators leads 35 miles south of Sultan to Bellevue. There, living within blocks of each other, are Chung Po Liu of Rainier Cascade, the importer who bought the suspect honey overseas, and the man he sold it to: honey broker Bob Coyle.

    Ingalls, who flatly denies the feds' smuggling allegation, said he was assured that the honey originated in Thailand.

    "The smell, taste and color is unique to the Thai honey that I'm familiar with," Ingalls said he told federal agents. "I've been judging the floral sources of honey throughout the world for more than 35 years, and I know the different tastes of honey."

    Ingalls said he's used Chinese honey in the past. He and his wife traveled to China in 1995 and worked closely with honey producers to help them improve their operations.

    "But that ended when they made big changes in how they do business," he said. "The quality control, honesty and ethics doesn't seem to be there now. I no longer trust them."

    Ingalls' disputed honey was seized, but so far no criminal charges have been filed. The federal agencies involved in the case have declined comment, as has Chung.

    Ingalls and Coyle are experienced, nationally recognized honey traders. Ingalls has done work for major honey trade associations, and Coyle was appointed last summer by the Agriculture Secretary to the National Honey Board.

    But Coyle is so disillusioned, he said he's getting out of the business.

    "It's become so difficult in terms of risk to rewards and not knowing what's out there," he said. "I just don't want to take the chance anymore."

    Even analyzing samples of honey before making a purchase -- for quality and authenticity-- is no longer a guarantee against running afoul of the law.

    Said Coyle: "Too often what comes in is not what was in the sample we tested earlier."

    'They're the watchdogs'

    Pure Foods is a small operation compared with Silverbow Honey, which runs a packing factory in Moses Lake.

     Gary Grigg
     ZoomMeryl Schenker / P-I
     Gary Grigg, the owner of Silverbow Honey, said his honey packing company is the largest in the Northwest and one of the 10 biggest in the country.

    Packing more than 5 millions pounds of honey each year, Gary Grigg said his company is the largest in the Northwest and one of the 10 biggest in the country, with corporate customers including Costco, Wal-Mart, Safeway, Unified Grocers and Fred Meyer.

    Getting all the honey he needs isn't a problem.

    "We buy what we can from local beekeepers, and we import the rest from other countries," said Grigg, noting that Silverbow imports honey for industrial and bakery customers using South American, Canadian, Indonesian and other suppliers.

    Even though Grigg uses some of the same suppliers as Ingalls, he doesn't worry about getting bad overseas honey. "The FDA is on top of it and they pull samples and check on the containers before they release them to us to buy," Grigg said. "They're the watchdogs."

    But shipping documents obtained by the P-I show that even the largest U.S. honey importers can be scammed.

    In August, 350 drums containing 223,300 pounds of Chinese honey were shipped from Hubei Yangzijiang Apiculture Co. in Wuhan, China, and loaded on a ship in Shanghai. Within a month, the shipment arrived at Tuglakabad, an import warehouse near New Delhi.

    Refractometer 
    ZoomMeryl Schenker / P-I 
    Mark Grigg pours honey onto a refractometer to determine the moisture content of the honey at Silverbow Honey in Moses Lake. 

    There, according to Indian Customs reports, the honey marked "for re-export purposes" was accepted by Apis India Natural Products. The drums still contained instructions from the Chinese company, saying the load was to be shipped to America's biggest and oldest honey cooperative -- Iowa-based Sue Bee Honey. Two containers of the honey reportedly were shipped to Norfolk, Va., and three more went to Jacksonville, Fla.; all were later routed to Iowa.

    "We do not buy Chinese honey," said Sue Bee Vice President Bill Huser. Then he quickly added: "We're trying not to buy Chinese honey. Someone could be trying to bamboozle us."

    Huser, who's in charge of quality control, said 40 percent of the cooperative's 60 million pounds of honey packed each year is imported. But Sue Bee boasts an in-house laboratory that Huser claims is used to put foreign honey through a number of tests, including checks for antibiotic residue.

    Those tests have found chloramphenicol-laced honey, he said. "It's still out there, yeah. ... We find it once a month or so."

    The tainted honey is returned to the supplier, said Huser, who concedes it could find its way back into the pipeline.

    "There's definitely a likelihood that it's being sold to someone else," he said.

    Rare arrests in honey plot

    If the steel drums cited in customs Special Agent Susan Jensen's criminal complaint were filled with plutonium instead of honey she'd have a dynamite start for a novel that could outdo Tom Clancy or Robert Ludlum.

    It's a drama of international intrigue, but the key players sound more benign than sinister. In February, agents took samples from nine shipping containers that had entered the country through the West Coast and were being held for one of the world's leading honey distributors, Alfred L. Wolff, in a customs warehouse 25 miles west of Chicago.

    The paperwork accompanying the shipment claimed the honey was Russian. But scientists in customs' lab in Savannah, Ga., analyzed the honey for natural soil residue and discovered it was really Chinese, Jensen reported in the complaint.

    On March 24, federal agents stopped Wolff's general manager, Stefanie Giesselbach, at Chicago's O'Hare International Airport as she got off a plane from Frankfurt, Germany. According to Jensen, Giesselbach admitted that her company, which has imported about $30 million worth of honey into the U.S. in the past three years, was "transshipping" honey.

    She told investigators that the seized Chinese honey had been shipped to Russia and then rerouted to the U.S., entering the country with bogus papers in order to avoid paying higher import fees and testing.

    For three months, federal agents pursued the case. Computer databases were searched, informants and witnesses questioned, company records seized.

    In May, a confidential informant told investigators it was "common knowledge" among Wolff executives that their honey shipments were frequently contaminated with antibiotics. If a customer complained, the informant said, the honey was routed elsewhere.

    Jensen reported in court documents that much of the contaminated honey would be resold at a discount to a Texas packer or to a Michigan firm that rarely tested for contaminants.

    Documents seized from the company also showed that employees at the German parent company, Wolff & Olson, knew of other shipments of contaminated Chinese honey being sold to U.S. firms. In one case, 125,000 pounds of contaminated honey from China was sold to a Wisconsin packager as "Polish Light Amber Honey," Jensen said in the complaint.

    The night of May 23, when Wolff's national sales manager, Magnus von Buddenbrock, dropped Giesselbach off at O'Hare for a flight home, the executives were arrested.

    The pair have been charged with conspiring to import Chinese honey into the U.S. by falsifying country of origin. The German citizens remain free on bail, but if convicted, the conspiracy charges carry up to five years in prison and a $250,000 fine.

    There is quality honey produced in the U.S., Canada and other countries, and honest people in the industry are working hard to keep it clean. But they say there's nothing easy about fixing the problems.

    While per capita consumption of honey in America is 1.1 pounds per year, the country produces only about 190 million pounds of the 450 million pounds consumed.

    And demand keeps rising. Brokers say the retail market hasn't changed much in the last several years, but use of honey as an ingredient in other products has grown.

    That means more scams, said Elise Gagnon, president of Quebec-based Odem International, one of North America's largest honey importers.

    "There's more crooks than ever, and it has become a real nasty business out there," said Gagnon, the spokeswoman for an international group formed to fight Chinese honey transshipments. "They gamble and very, very few -- almost none -- get caught. So they keep corrupting the system."

    Brazen laundering schemes

    Around the globe, honey laundering is so rampant that crackdowns are being pushed in a number of countries, including Russia, India and Australia.

    Illustration 
    See the raw data on honey exports in a Google Docs spreadsheet. 

    In the wake of the Wolff case, Russia's Interregional Beekeepers Organization held a rare meeting with U.S. and Russian trade officials in June, with both sides pledging to combat Chinese smuggling operations.

    It's a big problem, investigators say. While very little Russian-made honey is exported, according to the Federal Customs Service of Russia, records obtained by the P-I show that more than 11 million pounds of honey purportedly originating in Russia entered the U.S. last year alone.

    In February, the Australian Supreme Court imposed almost a half-million dollars in fines against two companies that shipped 1.8 million quarts of Chinese honey to the U.S. after falsely relabeling the honey as Australian.

    Earlier this month, the Indian government passed legislation aimed at preventing its ports from becoming laundering points for Chinese honey. The national Directorate of Revenue Intelligence found that through mid-November this year, 471 out of 665 honey shipments that listed India as the country of origin actually came from China.

    The U.S. imported 237 million pounds of raw honey last year. But honey brokers, bee experts and foreign customs officials say they're suspicious that seven of the top 12 countries appear to be exporting far more honey than their domestic bees produce or their export agencies acknowledge. These countries include Vietnam, India, Thailand, Russia, Taiwan, Indonesia and Malaysia.

    Some of the honey laundering is so brazen, it's hard to believe there haven't been more arrests, yet federal law enforcement agencies refer to the Chicago arrests as the only ones they can recall.

    Countries that have few if any commercial beekeepers, such as Singapore, are now exporting significant quantities of honey, records show. That includes the Grand Bahamas, which has been listed as the country of origin for honey shipped into Houston, authorities say.

    "I have a difficult time seeing the Grand Bahamas as a major honey producer," said David Westervelt, a Florida state apiculture inspector. "It's an island. You move bees on there and they'll die."

    And other countries that locally produce mostly dark, strong-tasting honey, such as India, Vietnam and South Korea, are shipping tons of the more marketable white honey.

    Vietnam is now the No. 2 honey exporter to the U.S., second to Canada. But Vietnamese honey officials say much Chinese honey is being transshipped through their country, citing 24 containers that arrived in Los Angeles earlier this month.

    "When the Chinese first got into trouble with this antibiotic adulteration, all of a sudden Vietnam became a major exporter of honey to the United States," said Mike Burgett, professor emeritus in entomology at Oregon State University who has monitored Southeast Asian beekeeping for 27 years. "I know damn well that the Vietnamese bee industry cannot be pumping out that much honey."

    Falsifying records to get honey illegally into the U.S. is a common practice, said a former Shanghai honey shipper.

    "In Hai Phong (Vietnam), the Chinese honey became Vietnamese and in Pusan (South Korea) the papers were changed to say it came from Russia," said the former shipper, who asked not to be identified.

    'None get caught'

    The Port of Tacoma is never a quiet place, and the morning of Nov. 5 wasn't any different.

    Almost round-the-clock, towering orange cranes eased 40-foot-long containers from freighters on to waiting trucks. About a third of a mile away from Pier 7, drivers effortlessly jostled steel containers up to the doors of the loading bays of K-PAC, a centralized container-examination warehouse.

    The pace wasn't any slower inside the cavernous metal building. Customs Import Specialist Frank McCracken walked around 66 steel drums spread out in a secure holding area.

    The green drums, marked "Pure honey, Extra light, Amber, Product of China," came from Hefei in southeastern China's Anhui Province, and were headed to Chicago. Using a hammer and crowbar to remove the bungs on three of the drums, McCracken inserted a stainless steel collection tube deep into each.

    "This is the most watery sample I've ever seen in a honey shipment," the 30-year veteran said.

    The samples were sent to a lab for testing. When the results come in, customs officials said the agency will decide whether to release the honey or pursue criminal charges.

    An alphabet soup of federal agencies insist that they work tirelessly to prevent adulterated honey from reaching store shelves. The closer you get to their headquarters, the stronger is the insistence that every shipment of honey is examined.

    But last month's testing at the Port of Tacoma isn't often repeated. The FDA's Stutsman said the agency only tests about a hundred honey samples a year and relies heavily on tips from industry whistle-blowers.

    "We sort of rely on that early-warning system," he said.

    Most honey shipments aren't inspected when they arrive at a U.S. seaport, or when they cross the border by truck or train. To prevent traffic jams at the ports, it's also common for the shipments to be moved to bonded warehouses close to the purchaser for a Customs inspection.

    Customs and FDA inspectors, however, say some sly importers do this to avoid more thorough dockside inspections by agents more familiar with smuggling techniques.

    A customs supervisor on the U.S.-Canada border, who asked not to be identified, disputed the notion that stopping honey smugglers is a top concern.

    "Honey is not only not near the top of the list of priorities," he said, "it's just not on the damn list."

    With so much adulterated honey crossing the border, the risk to the public is very real, said Westervelt, the Florida inspector.

    "Someday, some really harmful honey will be shipped into this country, and a lot of people will get sick or worse -- and then the government will do something about it," he said. "We shouldn't have to wait for people to get sick."

    P-I reporter Daniel Lathrop contributed to this report. P-I senior correspondent Andrew Schneider can be reached at 206-448-8218 or andrewschneider@seattlepi.com.