CABBAGE PALM HONEY

A thin bodied, light amber honey of very mild flavor and odor. Excellent for cookery and sweetening drinks where mild flavor desired.

TUPELO HONEY

This is produced from the tupelo gum tree (Nyssa) which grows along the streams in West Florida. It is light amber in color, of heavy body and mild flavor. It has the most varied use of Florida honeys, having been tried scores of ways and not found wanting. It does not granulate; hence is much sought for by packers to blend with other honeys to keep down their granulation.

ORANGE BLOSSOM HONEY

Makes us think of weddings and the perfume-laden air of springtime. In all the kingdom of beedom what sweeter words than Orange Blossom! To stand in an orange grove and watch these little workers hustle from blossom to blosom makes one realize that they too, regard it the choicest of natures golden sweets.

In cooking and candy-making few honeys carry over so much distinct flavor. At the fountain, in the tea room, as well as the diet kitchen, its exquisite possibilities have yet been scarcely thought of.

Because of its peculiar distinction it is much counterfeited. As many as twenty different mixtures, colors and flavors have been called orange blossom honey. Genuine orange blossom honey is light amber in color, heavy in body, has the real aroma of the grove in bloom and does not darken or change flavor much with age. In aging it granulates readily.

GALLBERRY HONEY

This honey is produced from the gallberry bush (Ilex glabra), which grows in flatwoods sections and blooms usually in May. It is almost a water-white honey, with a heavy body and very mild flavor and is considered one of our finest honeys. Due to the damage done this plant by burning the woods, very little gallberry honey has been