Matteo Tsael

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since May 28, 2020
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Recent posts by Matteo Tsael

Thank you all for the replies!

Pete Podurgiel wrote: the bees do the all the work, they will pick it clean and recycle the honey back into their comb, leaving you with fluffy wax



Yeah I was thinking of doing it at the end of the process, which obviously will never take all of the honey out of the mass.

Michael Cox wrote:Two years ago I made a thermostatically controlled honey warming cabinet, from an old chest freezer and a reptile heater



That's an interesting idea! I might try it out, although I would prefer not to melt ivy crystals, as I fear they might recrystalize again inside the jars and turn the honey into marble!

Michael Cox wrote:For the final wax cleanup I like to make mead



I tried it too! My first and only attempt turned into vinegar (but a very good one), maybe the place where I stored the vessel was too warm?

Thanks for the inputs!
3 years ago
Greetings!
I would like to start a discussion on optimising the crush and strain method.
This is my first winter as a hobby beekeeper, and I managed to collect some honey from my hives.
Since the beginning I used the crush and strain method, partially because I have frameless Warré hives, but mostly because I prefer the flavours this method preserves in the honey when compared to centrifugated honey.

At the end of the (looooong) waiting, I found myself with the sticky mass of wax: I noticed that even if it was not dripping anymore over the filter I was using, it still had some "extractable" honey in it.
Is there any tested method to get to those last drops left inside the wax mass without degrading the honey with, say, heat, centrifugation, washing..?
For example I was thinking of twisting a piece of cloth containing the sticky mass tight enough to squeeze the remaining drops out of the wax. The difference with using a fruit press is that the cloth is more easily washable than the press, and that you don't need the volumes of the press itself while dealing with the sticky leftovers, not to mention the economically cheaper tools involved.
I didn't had the chance to test it yet. Would you say it could work?
Any other idea?

Thank you very much!
(This is my very first message on this forum!)
3 years ago