« Back To New Products Top

100% pure Australian honey

100% pure Australian honey

High-quality Australian honey brands Mallee and Red Stringybark are now available online for customers in Japan.

Mallee is a eucalyptus tree prevalent throughout the drier regions of Australia. The honey is light in color with a smooth, thick consistency. In the cooler weather, it tends to candy quickly due to the high glucose levels. A delicious honey for use in beverages or on crumpets.

Stringybark honey is known for its stronger, darker texture. It is a great everyday honey, and is superb for cooking as it adds extra flavor and froths naturally when heated - ideal for cakes.

And don’t forget the health benefits of honey. While empty calories from refined sugar (which is depleted of anything good) contributes to a plethora of health problems, a tablespoon of honey dissolved in water taken 10 minutes before exercise, is able to reduce fat. (The honey informs the brain to take the glucose from the fat and not from your muscle.)

Buy 1 kg (1x 500gm Mallee, 1 x 500gm Red Stringybark) for 1,785 yen (plus postage)
For further details, visit www.karentokyo.com/ja/honey

Latest 15 of 32 Total Comments Show All

  • URO at 09:43 PM JST - 14th July

    As I'm a honey addict, I will definitely try this new one. As it is ideal for cakes, I will try it in my Armenian Honey Cakes' preparation.

    If you guys wanna know how to prepare an Armenian Honey Cake, here is the recip : dough: 75 g margarine, 3 eggs, 125 g sugar, 1 sachet vanilla flavored sugar (this is about 3 tsp), 3 tbsp whipping cream, 150 g flour, 1/2 sachet baking powder (this is approximately 2 tsp)

    almond crust: 100g margarine, 80 g sugar, 80 g honey, 2 tbsp whipping cream, 150 g almond slices, 1/2 tsp cinnamon

    Preheat oven to 175 degrees celsius. Melt the magarine in a little pot and let cool down a bit. Beat eggs, sugar and vanilla sugar until frothy. Combine with margarine and whipping cream. Then fold in flour, combined with baking powder. Put dough into a greased cake tin and bake in the hot oven for 10 minutes. Meanwhile melt the second part of the margarine in a pot, put in sugar, honey, whipping cream, almond slices and cinnamon. Bring to a boil, then take away from heat and pour onto the dough base. Bake for another 15 minutes. Take the cake out of the oven and the tin and leave to cool on a wire rack.

    By the way my favourite Honey is Attiki (Greek Honey, from Thyme and other flora). Try this one too ! Bon appetit!

  • jessssicaaa at 09:45 PM JST - 14th July

    Take it from an australian. (me) Dont buy it ;D

    You have been warned ^^

  • Razor at 09:47 PM JST - 14th July

    jessssicaaa

    Why not? I'm a honey lover. What's wrong with these brands?

  • Sarge at 09:47 PM JST - 14th July

    jess - Why exactly shouldn't we buy it ( aside from the high price )?

  • JamesM at 09:48 PM JST - 14th July

    Sarge, suggest you check the country of origin on the honey. 95% of the honey on sale in Japan is from China, 100% Japanese honey is not particularly cheap. Whether Chinese honey is "perfectly good" is debatable. It has been banned from the US, Canada and the UK in recent years for antibiotic levels (the ban no longer exists). The the issue with importing honey for sale in Japan is the 25.5% duty for pure honey. Hence the website seems to be making the sale in Australia and posting it in (I did not see the postage rate on the website, but assume this is the case).

  • knews at 11:59 PM JST - 14th July

    The simple people who say "honey is honey" and "rice is rice" and "wine is wine" live in a narrow little world. There are multitudes of all types of living things or things derived from living things. From "natto" to "sake" to "edamame" to "eggs", there are varieties that we don't even know about. The problem is that very few get to savour them all.

  • cleo at 09:59 AM JST - 15th July

    A bit of advice for karentokyo.

    If you want people to buy your product, tell them the price up front.

    I went to the HP, read about how wonderful this honey was, and tempted, hit the [purchase] button. I was asked for my credit card details, personal details etc etc - but there was no indication of how much the total order would cost. 1,785 yen + consumption tax (easy to work out) + shipping costs within Japan (could be anything from a nominal fee to over 1,000 yen). I didn't buy.

    You can't ask people to pay without telling them how much they are going to pay. If you want orders, you're going to have to put the full price up front.

    Sarge, that 'perfectly good Japanese honey' you're buying for 500-600 yen a kilo is no such thing - not perfectly good, and not Japanese. 100% Japanese honey will set you back around 800-1000 yen for a medium-sized (500gm?) jar in a countryside JA, probably much more in a posh department store.

    A question for honey experts. When I was a kid in the UK, we had what we called 'runny honey' and 'proper honey'. 'Runny honey' is what seems to be the only type available in these forn parts. 'Proper honey' is thick, and pale in colour; when you take out a spoonful, the shape of the spoon is left in the remaining honey. Can anyone tell me how this kind of honey is made, and where(if) I can get it in Japan?

  • carlosgodoy1 at 11:04 AM JST - 15th July

    CLEO: Small honey shop in Ushigome Yanagicho with great kiwi honey. I bought Southern Raita honey and its HARD and Great! http://pbees.jp/scb/shop/shop.cgi?No=421

  • cleo at 11:19 AM JST - 15th July

    Thank you, carlos!

    (Makes this Aussie honey look cheap though, dunnit?)

  • JamesM at 01:30 PM JST - 15th July

    Cleo: Runny honey is honey that does not contain crystals, this can be because the variety of honey does not crystalise naturally at room temperature (usually honeys with lower glucose levels) or because the honey has been overheated and over processed. Sometimes syrup and even water is added to the product, affecting its crystalization. Creamed honey is honey that has undergone controlled crystalisation resulting in lots of small crystals in the honey. This is still able to be spread and is the "proper honey" you refer to. Once the small crystals exist in the honey it is stable unless heated above 30C or so and the crystals melt. Most (but not all) NZ honey in Japan is creamy honey. Check out www.comvita-jpn.com but the prices are as you say not cheap.

  • Coolasapool at 06:06 PM JST - 15th July

    All honey is exactly the same

    wrong

  • TokyoHustla at 11:40 AM JST - 16th July

    Honey is honey. Paying more for 'premium' honey is absurd.

  • Maria at 08:43 AM JST - 17th July

    Buckwheat honey is very nice indeed. And you can get proper honey here, a lot more of these little organic shops are producing it. no, not cheap, buut there is a 100 times more selection now, than there was back in the "One size fits all" days.

  • cleo at 02:45 PM JST - 18th July

    I see the karentokyo HP now has the delivery price (525 yen) on the front page. Looks like a company that listens to its customers! It also says in red that consumer tax is included in the 1785 price.

    Now all we need to know is what jessssicaa is talking about....

  • the_harper at 11:28 PM JST - 18th July

    I tried Japanese honey when I was there and it was truly awful. Maybe there were better brands, but generic honey here in Australia is FAR better than the honey I bought in the supermarket in Japan. Those who say there's no difference between one honey and another either have no tastebuds or they've never actually tried a real variety of different honeys. Good grief - there's a huge difference between say Leatherwood honey and Blue Flower honey. And New Zealand Manuka honey; utterly different again.

Register or Login to leave a comment

Username:
Password:

› Forgot Password?