Visit the remote mountainside towns
in Turkey’s Black Sea region during springtime and you may witness
beekeepers hauling their hives upslope, until they reach vast fields of
cream and magenta rhododendron flowers. Here, they unleash their bees,
which pollinate the blossoms and make a kind of honey from them so
potent, it’s been used as a weapon of war.
The dark, reddish, “mad honey,” known as deli bal in
Turkey, contains an ingredient from rhododendron nectar called
grayanotoxin — a natural neurotoxin that, even in small quantities,
brings on light-headedness and sometimes, hallucinations. In the 1700s,
the Black Sea region traded this potent produce with Europe, where the
honey was infused with drinks to give boozers a greater high than
alcohol could deliver.
When over-imbibed, however, the honey can cause low blood pressure
and irregularities in the heartbeat that bring on nausea, numbness,
blurred vision, fainting, potent hallucinations, seizures, and even
death, in rare cases. Nowadays, cases of mad honey poisoning crop up every few years—oftentimes in travelers who have visited Turkey.
As the adventurous foodie might well ask, what’s the story behind
this potent gloop, and why aren’t we all stirring teaspoons of it into
our granola for a pleasant high?
Rhododendron flowers occur all over the world, and yet mad honey is
most common in the region fringing the Black Sea — the biggest
honey-producing region in Turkey.
“There are more than 700 different species [of rhododendron] in the
world, but according to our knowledge just two or three include
grayanotoxin in their nectars,” says Süleyman Turedi, a doctor at the Karadeniz Technical University School of Medicine in Trabzon, Turkey, who studies deli bal’s effects and has witnessed more than 200 cases of mad honey poisoning.
In Turkey, not only do the poisonous rhododendrons abound, but the
humid, mountainous slopes around the Black Sea provide the perfect
habitat for these flowers to grow in monocrop-like swaths. When bees
make honey in these fields, no other nectars get mixed in — and the
result is deli bal, potent and pure.
Although the product makes up only a tiny percentage of the Black
Sea’s honey production, it’s long held a strong Turkish following.
“People believe that this honey is a kind of medicine,” Turedi says.
“They use it to treat hypertension, diabetes mellitus and some different
stomach diseases. And also, some people use deli bal to improve their sexual performance.”
The honey is taken in small amounts, sometimes boiled in milk, and
consumed typically just before breakfast, he adds — not slathered on
toast or stirred generously into tea the way normal honey would be. Its
value to customers has given beekeepers an incentive to keep visiting
those rhododendron fields and producing it alongside their normal honey
products.
Johnny Morris,
a travel journalist from the United Kingdom, puts its Turkish
predominance partly down to history, too. In 2003, for his popular
travel column called ‘Grail Trail’, he went to taste
mad honey in Trabzon, a Turkish city that’s backed by mountains and
faces the Black Sea. “It’s got a long history in Turkey,” he says. “It
was used as a weapon of mass destruction for invading armies.”
Indeed, in 67 B.C. Roman soldiers invaded the Black Sea region under
General Pompey’s command, and those loyal to the reigning King
Mithridates secretly lined the Romans’ path with enticing chunks of mad
honeycomb. The unwitting army ate these with gusto, as the story goes.
Driven into an intoxicated stupor by the hallucinogenic honey, many of
the flailing soldiers became easy prey, and were slain.
This rich history, along with Turkey’s 18th Century trading
tradition, seems to account for mad honey’s persistence in the present
day — and the fact that it is purposefully harvested there. And yet,
finding it still amounts to something of a treasure hunt.
In the province of Trabzon — which contains the city of the same name
— mad honey is particularly entrenched: it’s where the Romans met their
end thanks to the toxic honeycomb all those centuries ago. Yet, “We had
to go searching for it quite a bit,” Morris says of his own quest to
find deli bal.
To get it, he went venturing into Trabzon’s mountains, enquiring
along the way. Eventually, in Trabzon city’s older quarters, he found a
place willing to let him in on the secret: a shop stocked with gear for
the avid apiarist, and selling all types of honey. (Morris also bought a
beekeeping outfit while he was there. Does he wear it? “Only for fancy
dress parties,” he says.)
The large, frothy jar of deli bal itself — which the shopkeeper called rose-of-the-forest honey (orman komar bali)
— was surreptitiously extracted from beneath the counter, amid warnings
not to overconsume, Morris recalls. The honey he tried went to his head
after just a teaspoonful — all he dared consume after learning about deli bal’s legendary strength. “It did make me feel quite light-headed,” he says.
The honey’s potency seems to have turned it into a treat reserved for
those in the know. “I think that the responsible shop keepers know they
shouldn’t be selling it to strangers,” Morris says. “They are a bit
wary of marketing it.”
Turedi explains that Turks in the region have the know-how to consume
it responsibly. “Local people are able to distinguish mad honey from
other honeys. It causes a sharp burning sensation in the throat and thus
it’s also referred to as bitter honey,” he says.
Despite cautions about safety, the honey seemed only to be
self-regulated when he was there, Morris says. Indeed, it’s legal in
Turkey, says Turedi. “You can easily buy and sell it.” Vaughn Bryant, a pollen expert at the Texas A&M University, who studies pollen traces in honey, confirms that mad honey is easy enough to purchase from abroad via the Internet, too.
As a longtime honey researcher — dubbed a ‘honey detective’
by some — Bryant’s fascination with mad honey stems more from the
desire to analyze than eat. “I have been interested in finding out what
really is in mad honey for many decades,” he says. “The problem was
finding a real sample of it to examine.”
To dodge the $166 per pound online price tag, and to make sure he was getting the right stuff, Bryant got his deli bal
from a Turkish friend who acquired the honey from hives in the middle
of rhododendron fields. “One colleague did put a drop or two of it on
his tongue and said that it had a numbing effect,” Bryant says. Now, he
wants to chemically analyze the honey to learn more.
What is known is that deli bal retains its numbing,
head-spinning traits because it is untreated, unprocessed, and
essentially pure. Bearing this in mind, how should the eager,
organic-obsessed foodie take it on?
“We know that if you eat more than one spoonful of honey including
grayanotoxin, you are at risk of mad honey poisoning,” Turedi says. “In
spring and summer, the honeys are fresh and may include more
grayanotoxin than in other seasons.” If that doesn’t dissuade the
adventurous foodie, then Turedi says to limit intake to less than a
teaspoon, “and if you feel some symptoms associated with mad honey, you
should get medical care as soon as possible.”
During his Turkish travels, Morris joked with an official from the tourist board that deli bal
had an untapped market in adventurous eaters. “It’s got this hedonistic
side to it as well,” he says—something the West certainly once
appreciated. But that tapered off, most likely with the advent of
cheaper alcohol and the import of drugs like cocaine in the 1800s,
Bryant reasons.
For now, the dangerously sweet syrup will retain its old-world mystery, tucked away in shops that are difficult to find.
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