Everything Blooming at Once
Wildflower honey isn't one flower. It's whatever's blooming when the bees are working—hyssop, asters, autumn clematis, late-season things that don't get their own harvest window. The bees visit everything, bring back nectar from a dozen different plants, and the result tastes like all of them at once.
What Makes Our Wildflower Honey Special?
- True Wildflower: Made from whatever the bees find in bloom across Pennsylvania and Maryland — not a single-source honey, but a living reflection of the Mid-Atlantic landscape throughout the year.
- Raw and Minimally Filtered: We keep it simple. Our honey is raw and minimally filtered to preserve all its natural goodness and delicate flavor.
- Flavor That Follows the Season: Spring and early summer harvests are lighting in color and sweeter; late summer and autumn harvests run darker and richer, taking on the deeper character of the blossoms. Every jar is a little different.
- Small-Batch Sourced: We source from trusted small-scale beekeepers in Pennsylvania and Maryland who prioritize colony health over volume.
- Crystallization is Normal: Raw honey crystallizes over time — it's a sign it's real. To reliquefy, place the jar in warm water under 110°F and stir gently.
- Kosher Certified: Thoughtfully prepared to meet kosher standards for everyone to enjoy.
Come back each season to taste the difference.
Your purchase supports Roots & Wings — our commitment to pollinators, people, and the planet. Learn how we give back.
Wildflower Honey FAQs
What does Wildflower Honey taste like?
That depends on the season. Spring and early summer harvests are lighter in color and sweeter, with delicate floral notes from clover, fruit blossoms, and the first wave of pollinator-friendly plants. Late summer and autumn harvests run darker and richer, taking on the deeper character of goldenrod, asters, and late-season blooms. Every jar carries a snapshot of whatever was blooming when the bees were working, which means the flavor shifts gracefully across the year. Coming back each season is part of the fun.
What's the difference between wildflower honey and monofloral honey?
Monofloral honey comes from bees foraging almost exclusively on a single nectar source, like Tupelo, Sourwood, or Spanish Lavender, which produces a consistent, identifiable flavor profile every time. Wildflower honey is the opposite by design. The bees forage across whatever happens to be blooming in their region, which can mean a dozen plants or more in a single harvest. The result is more variable and more landscape-dependent, but no less authentic. Both are real, raw honey. They're just telling different stories.
Why does our Wildflower Honey vary from jar to jar?
Because the bees themselves vary what they eat, season to season. Our hives work the Mid-Atlantic year-round, so the nectar profile shifts with the calendar: clover and fruit blossoms in spring, hyssop and goldenrod in summer, asters and autumn clematis in fall. Each batch reflects whatever was in bloom that week. Color, thickness, and taste all move with the season. It's the same brand on every label, but no two jars are quite the same honey.
Where does Bee Inspired Wildflower Honey come from?
From small-scale beekeepers in Pennsylvania and Maryland who prioritize colony health over volume. The Mid-Atlantic landscape across these two states is rich with wild and cultivated forage (woodland edges, farm fields, suburban gardens, abandoned pastures), and our bees move freely across all of it. We work with people we know, not commercial honey brokers. What ends up in the jar reflects the actual bloom of the region rather than a blended product from anywhere and everywhere.
Why is my honey crystallizing, and is it still good?
Crystallization is what raw, minimally filtered honey does. It is not spoilage, not a defect, and not a sign that anything has gone wrong. Most varieties will start to set within a few months, depending on the floral source and the temperature of your kitchen. To return it to a pourable state, place the sealed jar in a bowl of warm (not boiling) water for a few minutes and stir gently. Skip the microwave, which can scorch the natural enzymes and aromatic compounds that make raw honey worth buying in the first place.
How should I store raw honey?
Keep your honey at room temperature, away from direct sunlight, with the lid screwed on tight. A pantry shelf or cabinet works beautifully. Honey is one of the few foods that does not spoil, so there is no need to refrigerate it. In fact, the cold will speed up crystallization. If your jar does begin to set, that is normal and easily reversed with a warm water bath. Use a clean, dry spoon every time, and your honey will hold its character for years.
Ingredients
Pure, Raw, Minimally Filtered Wildflower Blossom Honey
Dimensions
2.75 x 2.75 x 3.375 inches
All orders ship via UPS Ground. We DO NOT ship to PO Boxes.
You can also order and pick up from Honey House in Owings Mills, MD.