Mark

HONEY FINGERS

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Website being updated.


Bookshop


Creative Studio
︎RMIT Zines (2024)
︎DESA Residency (2024)
︎HF10: 10 Fingers, 10 Years (2023)
︎Apartamento ‘Tuber, or not Tuber’ (2023)

︎’Café Feelings: Labne’ Public Art Park (2023)
︎Wildwood Beekeeping Workshop (2023)
︎’Good Natured’ Australian Design Cntr. (2023)
︎Vivid ‘Natural Wonder’ (2023)
︎’Hive Hands’ (2022)
︎Craft Contemporary (2022)
︎Soft Vibrations (2022)
︎Playground Love, Caves (2022)
︎Mud Talks (2021)
︎Reunion, The Art of Beekeeping (2020-2021)
︎ Poetry zine launch (2020)
︎“Beehives” zine launch (2020)
︎Honey Fingers x Hattie Molloy (2020)
︎Plants / Mulch (2019)
︎Bee Bread / Ferments (2018)
︎Honeycomb Vessel (2017)
︎There is Room at the Table (2017)
︎Postcards / There Are No Words (2017)
︎Swarm Trap, Nishi Hotel (2016)
︎Pane + Miele (2016)
︎Bread + Honey (2015)


Short Films
︎Soft Vibrations (2022)
︎Hive Hands (2022)
︎What it is to be broken, what it is to mend (2021)
︎Reunion (2021)
Featured in: 
︎Upsodown (2023)

Podcasts
︎ABC Radio National: Earshot
︎RRR: Uncommon Sense (2024)
︎RRR: Uncommon Sense (2020)
︎Cleopatra’s Bling Podcast
︎Make Good Podcast

Published Essays
︎Gestalten Books: Urban Farmers
︎Assemble Papers (Swarm Traps)
︎Assemble Papers (Honey Ethics)
︎Dining in Place
︎Bee Project
︎Hotel Hotel: Smoking the Bees
︎House Wear 2
︎Lindsay Magazine
︎Matters Journal
︎Table Magazine
︎The Plant Hunter
︎Blog: A Tribute to Anton Janša

Press
︎Gardening Australia
︎The Age
︎Verve Zine
︎New York Times on Turkey
︎Food Tank
︎Gourmet Traveller
︎Green Magazine (Swarm Trap)
︎Green Magazine (Beehives zine)
︎The Plant Hunter


Mark


Retailers:

Baker D. Chirico | Pidapipó Gelateria | CIBI Mina•no•ie

Honey Fingers is small batch, hand crafted, single-source honey. The flavour of each hive and batch isn’t blended with honey from hives from all over Australia or beyond (unlike a lot of commercial honey that is blended from many sources, which results in a samey-samey colour and flavour in every jar).

Each batch of Honey Fingers honey has a very distinct flavour that directly relates to whatever the bees in that hive were feeding on.

It means that honey from the same hive can look and taste different from season to season. It’s all about what was flowering in the city at that time.

So there’s a really nice connection between each jar of honey and the street or suburb it’s from.

People who suffer from hayfever are often very interested in this aspect of local honey.

Honey Fingers honey is raw and coarsely filtered – so bits of pollen, propolis, wax and other bee and plant products are in there.

Our honey not heat treated. It’s not even uncapped with a hot knife – we take the time to uncap each frame by hand with uncapping forks, and we use hand-powered extractors.

For real honey fans, this is the good stuff. Raw honey means that the bee products and plant materials remain intact and the health benefits are not filtered out. So it’s about as natural a honey product as you can get.

And when we say ‘small batch and hand crafted’ we mean it. Every jar is labelled with hive it came from, the date it was bottled, and is editioned. So you know you are getting a genuine, limited supply, local product.

ABOUT
CRYSTALISED HONEY


Most honey available on supermarket shelves is heat treated to stop the natural maturation process of honey – crystalisation. This heating process also damages the beneficial enzymes in honey.

Australians have been brought up on runny honey, but we think it’s time consumers appreciated the interesting changes that occur when honey crystalises: the new textures in your mouth, the melt and slow release of flavours, the added crunch on toast. Try it!

But, if you prefer your honey runny: place the honey jar in warm water, at about blood temperature (to avoid damaging the good bits heat it no greater than 40C) and the honey will melt down to its runny form.



• Honey Fingers acknowledges First Nations Peoples as the first inhabitants of the nation and the traditional custodians of the lands where we live, learn and keep bees