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Why 3,000-year-old Egyptian honey is still edible

Low water, low pH, antimicrobial peroxide — honey is its own preservative

Why 3,000-year-old Egyptian honey is still edible

Honey’s preservation isn’t magic; it’s three overlapping properties stacked on each other. Low water activity stalls microbes, low pH stalls them again, and the slow release of hydrogen peroxide from the bees’ own enzymes finishes whatever’s left. Archaeologists have eaten 3,000-year-old honey out of sealed Egyptian jars and found it more or less intact.

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