Honey is essentially fructose, so it's a really expensive dextrose, as the yeast treat it as dextrose and pretty much turn it instantly into alcohol.
And the flavours that make honey taste like it does are largely stripped out during fermentation.
I mostly ignore Nicks ramblings but in this case there is just so much wrongness crammed into so little space that I will make an exception.
Honey is essentially fructose Wrong - honey is about 33-45% Fructose the balance being mostly glucose 24-40% and water 15-20%.
so it's a really expensive dextrose Wrong - Dextrose is about 97% Dexter Rotated Glucose Monohydrate (you can see why we call it Dextrose for short) balance Water
as the yeast treat it as dextrose and pretty much turn it instantly into alcohol. Well as near as Nick gets to being right, yeast metabolises both fructose and glucose the same way, but before it can metabolise Fructose it has to do a bit of chemical rearrangement essentially making it into glucose, so yeast will use Maltose (2 X Glucose) (yes there is a couple of percent in honey) first, then Glucose then Sucrose (Invertase makes sugar into 1 Glucose and 1 Fructose) then Fructose.
As we approach the attenuation limit for the ferment the remaining sugars become proportionally richer in Fructose as the yeast preferentially selects others sugars first, as fructose is about 28% sweeter than Sucrose this will have an impact on the finished beer similar to what people get when they use sugar (Sucrose). Not necessarily a bad thing just different.
Leaving the instantly alone as I suspect its just hyperbole... we all know nothing happens instantly.
And the flavours that make honey taste like it does are largely stripped out during fermentation.
Not in fact the case, the sweetness is mostly removed during fermentation but speaking as an old mead maker most of the other flavours are intensified (well the perception of them is) by the removal of the sweetness.
Thats why you need to be careful when selecting honey for brewing. A strong flavoured (i.e. Leatherwood) can taste pretty good on a crumpet, brew with it and it will dominate the flavour of most beers, try to choose light clear sweet honey, my two favourites are Clover and Yellow Box, White Box and some of the orchid honeys are also excellent.
Honey is generally regarded as having a 75% yield, without doing a lot of maths, think of it as being 75% of what you get from a Kg of Sugar, or not a lot different to what you would get from a Kg of Liquid Malt Extract (~80% yield).
Honey Wheat beers are a great place to start experimenting with honey, avoid over hopping, just let the honey show what it can do, you might get some odd flavours when the beer is young let it mature and you should have some great summer drinking.
Mark
From the following
If you want to know way too much about honey this is a good read
View attachment CompositionHoney.20105942.pdf
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