Hershey Hug Honeybee Ingredients

One of my gardening friends asked if she could make Hershey Hug Honeybees out of all white chocolate. The Hershey part won't have stripes so I think the delectable treat will look more like a bug than a honeybee.

You can use plain white bark or special white chocolate bark like Ghirardelli chocolate. When shopping for Hershey Hug Honeybee ingredients, try to keep all the parts relatively proportional to each other.

When looking for maraschino cherries without stems, select a jar with cherries about the same size as the bottom of a Hershey Hug. I have found maraschino cherry sizes vary so I now the bottom of cherry jars to get cherries about an inch wide.

Also make sure the sliced almond slivers are a healthy size for honeybee wings. I went through several almond sliver bags before finding the larger size.

Most people don't use toothpicks in their kitchen staples anymore so pick up a box of flat wood toothpicks you can easy cut into one thirds each. You can easily pick these up by the antenna but I also like to give them their own mini-cupcake papers.

Don't forget a little tube of black decorator icing for eyes.

Charlotte

Hershey Hug Honeybees

We were asked to bring "something special" to an evening gardening meeting welcoming neighboring gardeners. It was the kind of event that required something more than cookies but less than a cake or pie.

I thought about making cupcakes with flowers on top but I didn't have all the ingredients. I had brought a bag of Hershey Hug kisses home by mistake so I pulled those out and started to unwrap them.

They are similar to Hershey Kisses, which I use to make chocolate mice, only Hershey Hugs are white chocolate with brown stripes.

The chocolate stripes reminded me of my honeybees so I started to play with the Hershey Hugs and melted white chocolate to see what I could make out of them. Reminded me of when I go shopping for custom wedding ring quilt fabric, sometimes the fabric dictates the pattern.

Adorable, don't you think?

Charlotte

Merry Christmas!

During winter 2011, I wrapped my honeybee hives with insulated styrofoam to help keep the hives warm.

Bees winter over by grouping themselves in the hive center keeping the hive at their favorite 90F temperature. Some colonies die when temperatures get so cold they can't move their wings to get to the surrounding honey stored towards the outside edges of the hive.

The styrofoam isn't pretty. The day before Christmas,  two junkers came by and offered to haul off the" two white refrigerators" they saw sitting in my garden. After they left, I quickly made honeybee stockings for each hive just in case Santa Claus might pass them by.

From all of us at, and in, Mildred hive,

May you have a warm and sweet Christmas.

Charlotte

Refrigerators?

There's usually an ongoing debate about whether or not to winterize bee hives. During winter 2011, I added a styrofoam coat to my hives, leaving an opening around the hive entrances. Right before Christmas, two pickers with a truck stopped by and asked if I needed the "refrigerators" hauled off.

It wasn't until they left that I realized they were talking about my hives!

Honey for Sale at Route 66 Antiques

When I ended up with extra honey in 2011, I decided to sell it at a new antique and pre-1970s collectibles store off Interstate 44. I packaged the honey in 2 oz. glass jars so people could sample strained raw honey and honey with comb just as it comes out of the hive. Honey is also a wonderful hydrating facial. Each jar contains enough honey for 6-8 facials.

New Queen Added

Once I determined I was missing a bee queen in Gertrude hive, it was time to add a new one.

The queen travels in a plastic container with a worker bee and a marshmallow stopper at one end.

Once placed inside the hive, it will take worked bees a couple of days to eat through the marshmallow to release the queen. By then, they should be familiar with her smell and open to accepting her into the colony.

Long live the queen!

Charlotte

Be Back by Sun Down!

Bees have schedules. They are usually out foraging by 9 am and back to the hive by sun down.

Bees from the same hive visit about 225,000 flowers per day. One single bee usually visits between 50-1,000 flowers a day, flying an average of 13-15 miles per hour.

A hive entrance can look very much like an airport take off and landing strip!

Charlotte

Sneaking in Back Door

When a hive has a problem, bees will come up with creative alternatives to stay in the hive.

In this case, Gertrude hive had winter boarders in the hive first floor so bees used a crack in the back to get into the hive. The mouse family destroyed about half the frames and were too big for the bees to chase out.

After removing the damage the mice did, I had to close the hive top for a few weeks to encourage bees to use the front door again.

It's not so bad in early spring when hive numbers are low. By end of July, though, there can be as many as 80,000 bees in one hive and they will need a much bigger door, and home, to get in and out!

Charlotte

Bees Visit Lots of Flowers

We think of honeybees visiting flowers but they also visit blooming bushes and trees like Missouri Redbuds. The variety of pollen gives honey its distinct, and varied flavor.

Professional beekeepers mix all the honey to make a homogeneous flavor.

I like to bottle different honeys to enjoy the variety of flavors bees produce. My bees have yet to produce two batchs of honey that taste the same!

Charlotte