Hello Health Champions. Today we're going to talk about what would happen if you started eating honey every day for 30 days and honey is very very popular for starters it's part of our language we talk about the land of milk and honey we talk about things being as sweet as honey and we say hey come here honey and honey has been around for a very long time it's part of our culture and it goes back thousands of years it used to be known as the food of the Gods honey was also the original sweetener because our ancestors didn't have anything else that was really sweet besides honey they used to have some occasional fruit but honey was way way sweeter than that and when I say ancestors I'm going to qualify that because people leave comments so with ancestor I'm not talking about your grandpa I'm talking about going back tens of thousands of years pre historic humans who were hunters and gatherers they did not have any other sweetener and the other thing about honey is that it's the first processed sweetener it's the first processed food really and even though it is completely natural in the sense that we find it in nature and we don't do anything with it the bees have processed honey so we start out with a flower and flower nectar and then the bee comes to visit that and sucks up the flower nectar and then they have enzymes that break down that nectar into simple sugars and then they concentrate it and evaporate it and it turns into honey and these little bees they really deserve some respect they work like nobody else as a result in our language again we have the word worker be or busy be to denote someone who works very hard all the time and did you know that in order to make just one pound of honey which is 454 grams it takes over two million flowers so the bees have to make two million trips to gather nectar to make even just one pound of honey and in the process of gathering all that nectar they travel the equivalent of more than once around the world not only that but you should think about this when you enjoy that little jar of honey that a single Bee makes less than one gram of honey in a lifetime but this goes Way Beyond just honey because we actually depend on bees for our survival they pollinate over 130 different fruits and vegetables and different plants and even if you don't eat vegetables or fruits if you're a carnivore or you don't just eat processed food you need need to realize that the thing you're eating might depend on the bees to pollinate their food but even just for humans what they pollinate represents about one3 of the food that we eat so overall we have this idea of honey as being Liquid Gold it's very precious it's a very very good thing but then on the other hand with Rising awareness we now know that sugar is really really bad so how does that fit together if honey is good but it's mostly sugar how can that be so these are some of the things that we're going to sort out in this video and I'm going to base a lot of this on a video I saw because it was very representative of a lot of the claims about honey that you see so we're going to figure out which ones are true and which ones are false and which ones kind of maybe somewhere in between so I'm going to show you some screen captures along the way here to show you that I didn't actually make this up that someone else published this and some of these may seem crazy but they're very representative of what people believe and what's being written out there so first thing they said in this video was that everything in their video was unbiased fact checked and reviewed by qualified health professional so that makes you feel really good up front like very very reassuring that this has to be topnotch stuff so let's take a look so one of the claims was that if you eat honey you will sleep better and then again on their slide they said eating honey right before bed May spike your insulin levels and I'm like that can't be good because if you watch this channel you know that that's not something we're going for but here they mention it as a positive and they say that this increased insulin can stimulate tryptophan which will stimulate serotonin which turns into melatonin and therefore would help you sleep but it doesn't work like this trust me if you create even a smidgen of a benefit which is pretty far reached because if you increase insulin you also bind up some of the tryptophan so it's less available but even if it did work you do not want to try to create health benefits by increasing insulin by creating insulin spikes because even if this worked you would create a dozen bad effects along the way so please don't do this and the next claim was that if you eat honey you will learn faster and be more relaxed and the mechanism proposed for this was that the glucose in Honey is quickly absorbed again like before it creates a blood sugar Spike and an insulin Spike which is not something that we're looking for but they suggested that this will lead to this will cause a powering up of your neurons which will ease anxiety and other psychological disorders now these are pretty strong claims but they're completely false or 99. 99% false because if you're hypoglycemic and you create a blood sugar Spike yes you will feel better temporarily but that high from the glucose Spike will soon drop and be followed by a low and then you eat again and you got a high and followed by a low so it's actually the blood sugar Spike that creates the low because it creates blood sugar roller coasters and what you're really looking for is stable blood sugar that is how you get stable mood and feel good and the way to do that is to not eat things that Spike glucose but rather slow foods like fat and fiber and meat and when I first saw this I'm thinking hey I bet that's why all the kids are so calm when you feed them a bunch of sugar right and then they made a few more claims that we're going to cover in a little bit here they said that honey will improve gut health because it contains prebiotics that you will lose weight because honey is so full of good nutrition in fact a good portion of your daily nutrition can be found in Honey and we'll get to that in the second but first of all I just wanted to point something out about lists and summaries because we're all tempted to look for shortcuts to learning because we're busier than ever and there's a tool that has been develop called AI or artificial intelligence and I love it and I use it but I really want to caution you and be aware of its limitation because I used the AI to do a summary of this video I wanted to get a quick idea what what are they claiming what are people thinking about it etc.
and the AI in the summary told me that honey can be used to prevent botulism in infants when in fact it can cause botulism in infants so if you have just a quick superficial understanding then you may read through this and accept that at first glance you may not stop and think hey that doesn't seem right and here one little word the difference between prevent and cause could be the difference of life and death in a baby so I urge you to take a little bit of time to actually understand how the body works and this is why I do my videos the way that I do because superficial knowledge can be very very dangerous and another way to look at this is the artificial in artificial intelligence artificial can also have a synonym as unreal, bogus, counterfeit and it can also mean faked mock phony and sham so keep that in mind before you hand over your health just to some superficial understanding some other claims that these qualified health professionals made in the video was that honey is an excellent source of energy that you should eat it every day and that honey has none of the damaging effects of plain sugar or white sugar and they said this was because honey contains completely different sugars and this is a very common belief so this is something that we really need to understand what are the sugars in honey so we're going to compare honey with sugar and first of all the percentage of sugar in honey is about 82% because it has some water whereas the white sugar it's crystals it has no water at all or maybe just some humidity from the atmosphere so when we compare these numbers and we go from here we're going to take the water out of this so we're going to only consider that Sugar portion and we're going to adjust the numbers accordingly and honey has a number of different sugars in it and these are not for you to memorize it's just to help you understand the structure and the mechanisms of these so there is sucrose there is fructose there's glucose there's maltose and galactose okay we're not going to get super technical here but next time you hear someone saying something about sugar and honey or agave then you'll know what they're talking about so the most basic sugar molecule is called glucose that's what's floating around in your bloodstream and that's how we measure blood sugar or blood glucose and the next one is fructose which is very similar in many ways it has the same number of carbons total the same number of everything total but the basic ring is five and we put an F for fructose so these are the two most basic ones and they're called monosaccharides because it's a single ring of sugar and then there is another one that is also a six carbon ring and it's called galactose and even though it's a six carbon it actually behaves more like fructose it's identical except one of the groups attached to one of the corners is flipped again you don't need to memorize but we need to kind of get the picture of this but because of this flip galactose Works more like fructose in that it can only be processed by the liver so glucose can be used by any cell in the body fructose and galactose are almost 100% processed through the liver and then if we take these sugars again and we link them up so now we have one glucose and we link it together with one fructose then now we have something called sucrose it's two rings it's a disaccharide and there's one more sugar in honey which is when we have two of the glucose molecules so these are two of the same but they're linked together and now this is called maltose and again this one is called sucrose so these are really all the different sugars in Honey and if you look there's really just three different rings but one acts very much like fructose so again all we're really talking about is glucose and fructose because everything sort of condenses down to that in the end so now let's look at how much of these things are in honey so the sucrose which again is this one half glucose half fructose is 1. 1 gram there's very little of that one whereas in white sugar it's all sucrose table sugar is 100% And by definition if you understand that there's one molecule of one and one of the other by definition there's going to be 50% of each so when sucrose breaks down it becomes 50% fructose 50% glucose but in honey it's a little different because it's not bound it's floating freely and there's 49. 8% of the fructose versus 50 in table sugar so pretty close I would say and glucose is 43.
6 versus 50 so again very very close and the difference here is that honey also has something called maltose which is two of the glucoses but that's only seconds away from breaking down into glucose that the maltose there's two of these so that's seconds away from becoming glucose so therefore this sort of has to be added to the glucose and then there's the galactose that we talked about that acts more like fructose so when we put all of this together we want to focus in on here and when we add back the glucose and the fructose in here we get 54% of fructose in Honey and 46% of glucose in honey when we account for the these odd ones so what that means again is once we take the water out of honey it is 100% sugar just like sugar and it's not very different it's off by a few percent but it's pretty much exactly the same thing and a lot of people also say that honey is great for diabetics it's so much better for diabetics because the glycemic index is completely different and no it's not glycemic index for honey is about 58 to compare with about 60 so depending on the source you find it's going to be off by a few points and honey is going to be off by a few percent based on what flowers they gather the nectar from but in the end when you remove the water it's going to be 100% sugar give or take a a decimal point and now with that understanding let's get into the next claim which is that it can improve gut health and here they do have a point so there's something called FOS or fructooligosaccharides and what is that I'm glad you asked so now if we start off with sucrose and we just start tying more of these fructose units this now has turned from sucrose to a fructooligosaccharide and and even though we can break down sucrose we cannot break down FOS because this is considered fiber but it is excellent food for our gut bacteria and these can get longer as well so typically when we talk about fructooligosaccharides we're talking less than 10 units and another name for this or another form that this exists is called inulin which we extract from chicory root so in chicory root as much as 60% of that is actually different forms of FOS so typically in the chicory root there are between two and 60 of these units so the shortest would be two the longest would be 60 on average and then they can process this and they can separate out the portion that has less than 10 and then they often use those as an alternative sweetener so this is a sweetener it's not as sweet as sugar but they add it to different products because it's a great prebiotic it's food for your gut bacteria but it's not calories and it's not fructose because you can't break it down so your bacteria can chop off these little fructose units but they are earmarked for the bacteria they're going to use it themselves so this does not increase your blood fructose levels and the shorter these molecules are so if it's two or three or four then it's quite sweet it's almost like sugar whereas if they get longer up towards 60 now they're barely sweet at all and you can buy this inulin separately and it's a good Prebiotic you can use the chicory root often as a sweetener and if you're making your own yogurt you can feed the bacteria you can make more bacteria in the yogurt by giving them some extra food they're going to be living to a large part from the lactose in the milk but you can give them a little extra by giving them some inulin so FOS is a great Prebiotic food for your gut and honey contains a fairly large percentage so one tablespoon which is 21 grams has5 grams and that doesn't seem like a whole lot you could get a lot more just by supplementing some inulin but even a little bit still can make a difference because you're looking for a variety of these but FOS can also be found in other Foods so 0. 15 grams you can find in 60 gram of onion in 25 gram of garlic which is a couple of decent cloves or 30 grams of rye and that's the pure rye not the stuff mixed up with wheat flour but you also don't want to limit yourself just to one type of Prebiotic fiber so there are many other foods like Chia is has a massive amount of fibers so there's 1. 15 gram almost seven times more Prebiotic fiber in just one teaspoon but again it's not FOS they're different types and that's the whole point your gut bacteria are looking for a wide variety of fiber another thing you often hear is that honey will help help you lose weight and in this video they said it was because honey is so full of vitamins minerals and healthy fats and here's the slide from that video with emphasis on the healthy fats in Honey according to the qualified as reviewed by the qualified health professionals on their panel and they also said along with that that you'll get a good portion of your antioxidants and your your nutrients your daily nutrients so let's go to a site called nutrition value.
org and look up and see what sort of nutrients we have in honey so when it comes to vitamins the vitamin content of one tablespoon which is 21 grams of honey we see the different nutrients of vitamins here we see 00 1% 0 0 0 so that's the first half of the vitamins second half of the vitamins we have 0 0 0 0 0 and zero well you know I'm not all that impressed I don't think I want to trust my nutrition to that sort of content well maybe it was the minerals they were talking about so we go look at minerals and here we have calcium is zero copper is one and then it's 0 0 one 0 0 0 0 0 zero maybe it's the healthy fats maybe it's all the fats in honey that these health professionals were talking about so fat we have zero saturated fats zero and as you can tell in these columns not only is it 0% but even going down to the third decimal points there not even a trace of fat in there there is no monounsaturated fat there is no polyunsaturated fat in honey so I'm just curious based on that a good portion of of what what are you getting a good portion of so the fact is there's really nothing in terms of nutrition that we can get from honey except sugar and this is what's so frightening about the equal access I love the internet I love the fact that YouTube helps distribute these videos but it's also a platform for ignorant people who can claim just about anything they want and when enough people keep repeating their claims now all of a sudden it becomes a common truth so after all that is there anything good about honey well absolutely there is first of all it tastes really really good humans really love that sweet flavor and if you're going to have something sweet in moderation honey is definitely one of the best things you can have secondly even even though I mentioned all the similarities to sugar honey is absolutely better than sugar in every way honey is a live product it has certain things in it and we'll talk about some of the benefits sugar is absolutely dead it has no benefits no nutrients whatsoever so one thing that we know about honey that can maybe provide some of the anecdotal benefits all of the things that people are reporting is the fact that honey is antibacterial it can kill off bacteria so because of this some of the strongest benefits are probably reports that it can soothe a sore throat there's a lot of people that use it as a cough remedy as a sore throat remedy they give their kids instead of cough drops or cough medication and in that sense I'm all for it if you can have something natural to keep medical chemicals out of your body then and absolutely go for it but there's also a large body of anecdotal evidence anecdotal reports and a lot of these have to do with immunity and allergies people say that after they start consuming honey that their Airborne allergies their seasonal allergies go away people talk about General immunity that they haven't had a cold or flu in 20 years since they started eating honey and I do believe there can be something to that I don't think that you should rely exclusively on honey and I don't think the people who have these anecdotal reports I don't think they do that I think they do have a pretty good lifestyle in general but one way that this can work is that honey contains different chemical compounds from the flowers called polyphenols and these are very mild plant toxins that plants use to defend themselves but in very small amounts they can actually be beneficial and contrary to popular beliefs these are not nutrients they are not for you they are for your gut bacteria and they can affect your biome your balance of bacteria positively and because that has a lot to do with your immunity it's possible that that's a mechanism by which it can actually improve immunity and help allergies so even though I spent a good portion debunking crazy claims it was mostly the mechanisms and the way things are presented they're presented as a cure for something and you don't want to think about it that way you want to think of it as part of an overall healthy lifestyle and you want to understand what kind of claims are crazy and which ones may have some validity so if you've had some benefits if you've noticed some of these benefits we just talked about please let us know in the comments because we'd love to hear more about that so how much should you take well it depends a lot on the person in some of the studies they were using up to 70 grams a day before they saw any noticeable effects and 70 grams a day is already way over the limit even the general recommendations from the USDA limits sugar intake at 50 gram and like we said even though honey is way better than white sugar it's still sugar and the quantity is a problem so USDA recommends 50 grams I would say keep it much lower than that especially if you have tendency to a fatty liver or insulin resistance and realize that the vast majority of modern people have insulin resistance and some degree of fatty liver and fructose is the biggest problem for a fatty liver and honey has 54% of that so again if you're insulin sensitive you can have a certain amount if you have insulin resistance you want to really keep it down so I would probably suggest that you eat less than 20 grams a day so that's about one tablespoon of honey and again if you have some metabolic issue then that is 20 G total that is not in addition to ketchup and muffins and barbecue sauce that's the total so I don't think we need to be absolutely fanatical about sugar I don't think everyone has to be zero in every regard but we need to understand these numbers so we can keep it in proportion that if you eat 20 gram of this and then you eat barbecue sauce and ketchup and all the other stuff before you know it you're up to 70 80 90 grams a day anyway and that will give you or maintain that fatty liver so that said a lot of people claim that honey will fix diabetes and I really don't see how it would do that I think if you cut out all other sugars and you stay low carbs I think that you could probably have up to 20 grams a day and still have good progress with reversing your diabetes and there may even be some components in the honey that will assist you but more is not going to be better and if you want to use honey if you have a sore throat or a cold you want to understand that it probably works best as a topical so you want to take the honey straight and you want to use small amounts and let it dissolve in the mouth and swallow it slowly and use a tiny little bit several times a day so maybe like a half a teaspoon three to four times a day or maybe even less even more frequently and one more thing that most of the beekeepers and most of the people who stay up on this and most of the people who use honey as part of a healthy lifestyle they really emphasize that the honey must be raw if it's been pasteurized if it's been processed now they have killed off and removed just about everything that would give you any benefit uh as far as health and that also means that this very popular idea of putting honey into a hot tea or hot coffee is probably not a good idea that you're probably killing off a lot of the benefits so if you do that you want to make the coffee or the tea and let it cool down to approximately body temperature and then you can put the raw honey in and still have those benefits but there's one more thing that you could try if you want to get some of the benefits without all the sugar and that's something called propolis or propolis I'm not sure how that's pronounced but bees really make two things they make honey which is their food reserve and then they make this propolis which is their it's a building material essentially and they use it as spackling or mortar to seal up their beehive and it contains a lot of the same compounds that are potentially beneficial as what the honey has in it so you could take that as a supplement and not have any of the sugar with it I'd love to get some reports even if they're anecdotal from you you can leave the comments but when you read those and when you leave them keep in mind who are the people who use honey on a regular basis especially the raw honey and I would contend that there are different that people care about their health at different levels so the people who eat honey are probably more into a natural lifestyle than someone who is wolfing down energy drinks and playing video games for example I would pretty much bet money on that so if you give us an anecdotal report please also tell us your overall view of health and and other things that you're doing so we can help people put that in perspective because those people into the more natural Lifestyles they probably move more they probably get more fresh air they probably appreciate more Whole Foods they're not just seeking out honey instead of sugar they're probably looking for better quality foods overall and they're probably getting a whole lot less sugar not just by replacing sugar with honey but they're probably eating way less sweet stuff overall and as a result they probably also eat way less processed food so they're keeping a lot of bad stuff out so if you would please include that if you leave a comment so we can all kind of get the bigger picture. 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