What is Yemeni honey?
Yemeni honey is a type of honey produced in the Yemeni nation in the Middle East, which is known for its flavor and healing properties. It is a type of monofloral honey that has a clear taste due to the fact that the bees that produce it collect only nectar from only one type of flower, Sidr flowers or Lote Tree. The botanical name Sidrova tree is ziziphus spina-christi, which means "Christ's thorns Jujube" and is a native of a tree throughout Africa and Asia, which is cultivated for its edible fruit and other parts.
The sidr tree is of particular importance for Jewish, Christian and Muslim religions, because it is considered a species from which the Crown of Christ was made. It is also important in Islamic history, because its fruit Jujube is considered the first thing Adam, the first man, ate according to Islamic tradition when he descended on earth. The concentration of the tree grows after Western Hořoblast with Yemeni, where honey production is an important commercial activity and the local bee populations rely on iton its primary source of nectar. The history of the Yemeni honey originating in this region can be traced until ancient times in Egyptian records and can be sold at high prices around the world due to its rarity and quality.
Among the types of diseases that are said that Yemeni honey is effective in treatment are stomach ulcers, skin conditions and insomnia. Singers are reported to be used because it is a soothing way to relieve sore throat. It is also considered effective in promoting the treatment of a wide range of wounds.
It is assumed that Yemeni honey came in the area of Wadi Do'an or Valley in Yemen. Every year, native beekeepers are collected in the region to reap honey, and its samples are tested together with Manuka Medo Research in Ottawa, Canada in 2008 for their antibacterial properties. Manuka Honey is produced in New Zealand bees that live on nectar from the Manuka shrub. Both types of honeyIn the inhibition of Staphylococcus strains, they have proved to be more effective in the inhibition of Staphylococcus bacteria than routine antibiotics. Research suggests that Yemeni honey could therefore be an effective treatment to alleviate the symptoms of colds such as chronic sinusitis, headaches and breathing problems.Not only are the tree flowers useful for bees, but the local population worship the tree so much that they also use leaves, resinous oils, bark and wood ash and its seeds are considered to be a high protein content. Although the tree honey is sold wide throughout Yemen, the UN UN UN Agrulture Organization (FAO) estimates that it is about 100 times more expensive in the global market than other types of commonly produced honey.