Three Jars of Britain's Rarest Honey.
Harvested once a year from the wild ling heather of the North York Moors. Bold, earthy, and unmistakably Yorkshire. Featured in Vogue Hot List, June 2024. Three 280g jars of a honey that simply cannot be hurried or replaced.
Soldes ! 3x British Heather Honey Stock-Up Pack – Raw Yorkshire Moorland Heather Honey 3x280g
£38.97 Le prix original était : £38.97.£37.02Le prix actuel est : £37.02.
Stock up on Britain’s rarest honey. Three jars of raw Yorkshire Moorland Heather honey, hand-pressed from wild ling heather. Featured in Vogue Hot List 2024. 3 x 280g jars. Save 5%. Free UK delivery.
Our Heather honey is the rarest, most prized, and most characterful honey produced in Britain. Hand-pressed once a year from the wild ling heather of the North York Moors. Bold, earthy, with notes of cocoa and resin, and a thixotropic texture found in no other British honey. This is the honey that put HoneyBee and Co. in Vogue's Hot List, June 2024. Three jars is how our regulars keep it in the cupboard through autumn and winter.
What Makes Yorkshire Heather Honey Special
Single-origin, single-harvest, and unlike anything else produced in Britain.
Raw British Heather Honey (3 x 280g, 840g total)
Our Heather honey comes from a single landscape: the North York Moors, one of the largest expanses of upland heather moorland in the United Kingdom. Over 550 square miles of open, windswept terrain blanketed in Calluna vulgaris, ling heather, the species responsible for the world's most prized heather honey.
The moors sit between 200 and 450 metres above sea level. Acidic peat soils, high rainfall, and short summers stress the heather plants and concentrate their nectar. That intensity translates directly into the flavour: bolder, richer, and more complex than heather honey produced at lower altitudes.
The bloom lasts only four to six weeks each year. Our beekeeper times the harvest precisely and hand-presses the honey from the comb, because heather's unique thixotropic structure grips the wax and will not release through standard spinning. This is craft, not factory production.
Six Ways to Use Yorkshire Heather Honey
Bold and savoury-edged. This is a honey that pairs with strong flavours, not delicate ones.
On aged cheddar or stilton
Heather's resin and cocoa notes cut through strong cheese like nothing else. A cheeseboard essential. Try it with mature cheddar, stilton, or an aged goat's cheese.
Stirred into breakfast porridge
The warmth loosens the thixotropic structure, releasing the full aroma. A single teaspoon adds more flavour than three of regular honey. A Yorkshire breakfast classic.
Drizzled over dark chocolate desserts
The cocoa notes in heather mirror the chocolate and deepen every bite. Try it on brownies, tarts, or dark chocolate mousse.
In whisky cocktails and hot toddies
Heather honey and whisky share the same moorland DNA. A dessert spoon of heather in a hot toddy is transformative. Equally good in a Penicillin or a Whisky Sour.
Glazing roast lamb or duck
Brushed over lamb or duck in the last ten minutes of roasting, heather honey creates a deeply savoury caramelised crust. The resin notes work beautifully with gamey meats.
Straight from the spoon
This is a tasting honey. With a jar this rare and this characterful, spending a quiet moment with a teaspoonful is time well spent.
Three Yorkshire Recipes for Heather Honey
Traditional British pairings that bring out heather's bold, earthy character.
Heather Honey-Glazed Roast Lamb
Ingrédients
- 1.5kg leg of lamb
- 3 tablespoons Heather honey
- 2 tablespoons Dijon mustard
- 2 sprigs fresh rosemary, chopped
- 3 garlic cloves, minced
- Sea salt and black pepper
Method
- Preheat oven to 180C. Season lamb generously with salt and pepper.
- Warm heather honey slightly to loosen, then whisk with mustard, rosemary, and garlic.
- Roast lamb for 1 hour for medium-rare, basting once at 30 minutes.
- Brush glaze over lamb for the final 15 minutes, letting it caramelise.
- Rest for 15 minutes before carving. Serve with roast potatoes.
Heather Honey and Whisky Hot Toddy
Ingrédients
- 50ml Scotch whisky (Highland or Speyside)
- 1 heaped teaspoon Heather honey
- Juice of half a lemon
- 150ml boiling water
- 1 cinnamon stick
- 2 cloves and a slice of fresh lemon
Method
- Warm a heatproof glass or mug with boiling water, then empty.
- Add heather honey and lemon juice. Stir until dissolved.
- Pour in whisky. Top with boiling water and stir gently.
- Add cinnamon stick, cloves, and lemon slice. Sip slowly.
Heather Honey with Aged Cheddar and Walnuts
Ingrédients
- 200g aged English cheddar, room temperature
- 2 tablespoons Heather honey
- 50g walnut halves, lightly toasted
- Crackers or thin oatcakes
- A few sprigs of fresh thyme
Method
- Slice cheddar into rough wedges and arrange on a wooden board.
- Scatter toasted walnuts around the cheese.
- Drizzle heather honey generously over the cheese and nuts.
- Garnish with thyme sprigs. Serve with oatcakes.
Why Three Jars of Heather?
This is not the honey you buy casually. Here is why our regulars buy three at a time.
Single Harvest Per Year
Ling heather blooms for only four to six weeks. If the harvest fails, there is no second chance until the following year. When this year's batch sells out, it is gone until next autumn. Three jars carries you comfortably through that gap.
Britain's Rarest Honey
Heather is the most expensive honey produced in Britain. Not marketing, but the real cost of single-harvest, hand-pressed production from a wild, weather-dependent bloom. Every jar is effort made edible.
A Honey Built to Last
Heather's bold flavour means a teaspoon goes further. A generous drizzle on aged cheese or into porridge is enough. Three jars lasts most households from one harvest to the next.
Featured in Vogue
Our Heather honey appeared in Vogue's Hot List, June 2024, described as an exquisitely British treasure. The kind of gift that tells the recipient exactly how much thought went in.
From the Yorkshire Moors to Your Table
One landscape. One species. One harvest per year.
The North York Moors cover more than 550 square miles of open upland terrain in the north of England. In late summer, the ling heather turns the hillsides a deep purple. This is where our beekeeper places the hives, timing the move precisely for the short four-to-six-week bloom.
Heather honey is the hardest honey in Britain to produce. Its thixotropic structure grips the comb and refuses to release through standard centrifugal spinning. It must be hand-pressed or carefully agitated. This is slower, more labour-intensive, and less efficient than any other British honey variety. It is also why nothing else tastes like it.
Why Heather Beats Refined Sugar
Raw heather honey carries a significantly higher antioxidant and flavonoid content than most other honeys, owing to the stressed, upland growing conditions of the ling heather. It is less sweet than most honeys, which means it complements food rather than overpowering it. Honey is still classified as a free sugar and should be used in moderation, but in a fair comparison, raw Yorkshire heather brings flavour depth and natural complexity that refined sugar simply cannot.
Read our full Honey vs Sugar guideThe Stock-Up Pack Is For
The honey enthusiast, the gifter, and the British food lover.
Yorkshire Heather Honey, Briefly
What we know, what is promising, and what is still being studied.
Higher Antioxidant Content
Published research suggests heather honey carries one of the highest antioxidant and polyphenol profiles of any honey globally. This is linked to both the acidic peat soils and the short, stressed bloom period of the ling heather at altitude.
Thixotropic Structure
Heather's gel-like texture is caused by proteins in the ling heather nectar. It is one of only a handful of honeys in the world with this property, and it cannot be faked or replicated in another variety. If your heather pours freely, it has been over-processed.
Natural Enzymes Retained
Because our Heather is cold-pressed rather than heat-extracted, naturally occurring enzymes like diastase and glucose oxidase remain intact. Commercial heat processing typically destroys these.
A Less Sweet Alternative
Heather honey is noticeably less sweet than most common honeys, which makes it easier to integrate into savoury dishes and alongside strong flavours. Honey is still a free sugar and should be used in moderation, but heather's flavour intensity means you typically use less.
This information is general and not medical advice. Honey should not be given to children under 12 months. If you have diabetes, severe allergies, or are managing blood sugar, consult your GP before significantly changing your diet.
Questions fréquemment posées
Why is Heather honey the most expensive British honey?
What does thixotropic mean?
Will it crystallise like other honeys?
Where exactly does it come from?
How is it different from Scottish heather honey?
What does it taste like?
Can I subscribe to this pack?
How should I store it?
Read More About Heather
Three jars of Britain's rarest honey.
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