The Healing Powers of Honey

Good for a sore throat, your hair and lowering cholesterol, the ancient honeycomb shows it can also improve your complexion.

“Eat the crusts, it will make your hair curly!”, “Add some honey to your tea instead of sugar, it will help your throat!”

Well after years of eating bread crusts, my hair is somewhere between curly and crazy so my faith in the old wives tales definitely diminished. It turns out however, that apart from being a great addition to many Middle Eastern recipes, there is some truth to the tale of honey being good for one’s health.

The tale is not a new one, since as far back as ancient Egypt it was used as a remedy for various ailments, applying it to wounds and making it part of the mummification process.

Since honey is largely made up of natural sugars, it is attracted to water making it capable of absorbing and maintaining moisture. This makes it an ideal application for external wounds, as it can absorb body fluids, while encouraging healing and preventing infection.

This ability to absorb fluids and prevent infection makes honey an amazing natural antibacterial and antibiotic, which explains the healing powers it has in a cup of tea (and as a natural cough medicine). In a world where antibiotics are prescribed for the smallest reasons, it might be worth remembering that after using these medicines, the body eventually builds up a certain amount of resistance to these drugs.

The healing powers of honey do not stop at a sore throat. By adding it daily to food instead of sugar it can also be used to lower levels of cholesterol, which can help fight various heart diseases.

From something as serious as heart disease to the annoyance of skin problems, honey can provide relief.

By mixing it with equal parts of cinnamon paste, you can apply it to your face as a natural relief for pimples, eczema and other skin infections.

While honey does not cure everything, there is definitely a reason for it to be so popular (there is some drama surrounding its production in Israel) in ancient medicine as well as Middle Eastern cooking.

So maybe Mary Poppins had it wrong, maybe it should have been “a spoonful of honey helps the medicine go down”?

Read more on honey:
Honey is Bittersweet in the Middle East
Urban Beekeeping Keeps NYC Green
Urban Beekeepers Buffer Colon Collapse

Image via kabils

Naomi Ben-David
Naomi Ben-David
Naomi interned at Green Prophet during the summer of 2010. She grew up in Australia with a chiropractor mom who introduced her to various forms of alternative medicine. Her mother was forever pointing out the healthy food choices in the supermarket, or attempted to make it from scratch at home in order to avoid the preservatives and additives in the food. Naomi’s mother’s influence has stayed with her, impacting the food and medical choices she makes to this day. She is currently pursuing a career in writing.

Read More

1 COMMENT
  1. My son gets flaky, peeling skin in the winter. I applied honey right on the red, flaky areas and it cleared right up. It did come back a couple weeks later, but one application clears the face very quickly, and it lasts quite a while.

TRENDING

10 Amazing Facts About the Sidr Tree

Most people in the West have never heard of the Sidr tree. That's strange when you think about it. This tough, thorny desert tree has fed people, bees, birds, and camels for thousands of years. It appears in Islamic tradition. Its honey sells for astonishing prices.

The holy sidr tree can stop desertification

Al-Rumaydh describes the Sidr less as a single organism and more as a working ecological unit. Its deep roots reach down toward groundwater, while lateral roots spread wide to catch surface moisture. Its dense canopy slows wind instead of blocking it abruptly, reducing erosion.

The Two Types of Beer Lovers and What It Means for Sustainable Craft Brewing

At its core, this study rewrites a long-standing assumption: that beer drinkers form a homogeneous crowd. Far from it—your audience may fall into flavor extremes. As craft brewers, you now have the tools to tailor your offerings, sharpen your sustainability goals, and deepen consumer engagement.

Shilajit honey is a superfood discovered by monkeys

Shilajit honey is a powerful natural health product that...

Taste Saudi Arabia’s Slow Food movement

Currently, Saudi Arabia has documented 13 protected food items under the Slow Food movement’s Ark of Taste, an initiative to safeguard traditional foods at risk of disappearing. These items represent the country’s diverse culinary heritage.

Here’s How To Implement The Four Pillars Of Employee Engagement

If you throw a party for your work team and they are vegans, don't make it a barbecue. Know the sustainability values of your team to boost moral and retain good people.

Locals From Rishon Fight IKEA

Big Box stores are a pretty new concept in Israel, and thank God that not every Israeli city wants them in their backyard. A word from someone who has see the beautiful farmland around her hometown Newmarket, Ontario stripped and converted into vulgar strip malls of big box shops: they have no place in a healthy and sustainable town or city.

The Jewish National Fund Meets An Inconvenient Truth

According to the JNF, it has transformed thousands of acres of barren land into green forests in Israel. They state that each person emits about 23 tons of carbon per year, estimating that each tree planted can absorb one ton of carbon in its lifetime. That's a whole lot of trees you'd need to be planting. Could so many fit in Israel?

How to quiet noise from construction in your office

Streets need to be resurfaced in New York but the humming and grinding noise is unsettling. Noise is environmental pollution. 

EarthX and a blueprint for sustainable investing

Trammell S. Crow, a Dallas-based businessman and father of four, is focusing his efforts on impact investing, and media that focuses on saving the planet through EarthX.

Mining Afghanistan’s Mineral Discoveries Similar to Avatar

Now that American forces in Afghanistan are commemorating the longest period of any war that America has been involved in, including the 1965-73 Vietnam War, the recent discoveries of large and extremely valuable mineral and metal deposits may finally bring to light a reason to continue the presence of US fighting forces in this war torn and backward country.

From Pilot Plant to Global Stage: How Aduro Clean Technologies’ 2026 Expansion Signals a Turning Point for Chemical Recycling Investors Like Yazan Al Homsi

The company's Next Generation Process (NGP) Pilot Plant in London, Ontario, has officially moved into initial operating campaigns, generating the kind of structured, repeatable data that separates laboratory promise from commercial viability.

Nobul’s Regan McGee on Shareholder Value: “Complacency Is the Silent Killer” 

Why the governance framework designed to protect shareholders so...

Popular Categories