I'm not an expert but read betwen the lines on that last one.
"Never heat pasteurized (flash heated to 145 to 160 degF)."
Yeah, I'm skeptical about that one too, though they do say "While cold processing the raw honey by hand is time consuming, it ensures honey’s natural goodness is included in every bottle. We would not have it any other way and neither should you!"
honeycomb is still sugar..nothing magical about it.
Surely you'll agree that it's also more than just pure sugar. Whatever the reason, I fare a lot better when eating raw fermented honey than refined cane sugar, conventional heated honey, mildly heated centrifuged honey, or supposedly truly unheated honey that isn't fermented, with unheated honey being second best (least worst) among those options for me.
personally I can't figure out how one would even get liquid honey into a jar out of a comb, obviously its strained in some way if it doesn't have chunks of stuff in it and unless it says specifically I can only guess they are using heat.
I figure most probably strain it at least a little to get the bee parts out, though some claim to not strain it. From what I've read, they apparently pick out the bee parts. I don't think straining has a bearing on ease of getting it out of the combs. Presumably there are methods that were used before the invention of honey centrifuges, right? This looks like one such method, using an extractor:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DEmxNDPHBlEThere are even some who claim that centrifuges don't heat the honey, including some beekeepers:
http://www.beesource.com/forums/showthread.php?254815-Raw-fermented-honey-fan&s=91681ebcb09a4e9ebb37e37ae7e9aaa5 This guy uses a hand-cranked extractor, though he uses an electric heated knife to remove the cappings:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_3Eh4Ka_1Bo&NR=1The cappings are my favorite part of the honeycomb, so it's a shame to me that they tend to be discarded. My ideal honey would probably be fermented honey that includes the cappings, comb and brood of both the honeycomb and broodcomb, at least some of each of the whole lot, preferably heavy on the cappings, and I've heard that the brood are quite tasty too.
Whatever the reason, I do best with the Really Raw fermented honey. Maybe it has nothing to do with the lack of centrifuging, maybe it's just he microbiota, I don't know, but whatever the reason it seems to be better tolerated by me than any other honey I've tried.