Ok,
here is the puzzle:
0. I'm eating 100% PD/RPD foods.
1. Normally, my hands and feet are
always nicely warm.
2. I have noticed no problems from eating butter and milk (both raw) except maybe a bit of "passing winds", but I can't say for sure it isn't from something else.
3. I have a jar of
honey at home.
It's crystallized. It has definitely not been pasteurized or (consciously) heated above 45 C/113 F. It's also "unheated" - however "unheated" in this beekeeper's case most likely means "not heated after crystallization" (I still have to ask him - the honey was bought for me by my mother, not by myself). It's most likely been centrifuged - maybe it went above 93 F/34 C, maybe not.
4.
When I eat this honey with butter and/or milk, I reliably and consistently get cold hands afterwards.(I haven't measured how long this lasts, my estimate is between 1-3 hours.)I suspected the sugar in honey, but here's the "glitch"...
5. When I eat a good portion of a sugary
ripe pineapple (I don't eat much of other fruits these days) with avocado or
even without any fat, I
do NOT get this type of a reaction.
So the question is:
What's causing it? 
My only somewhat plausible hypothesis I came up with so far is this:
- the honey
indeed is raw -> therefore...
- the
insulin-like substance (amylase or whatever it's called) actually causes a
drop in my blood sugar
- either because there's "too much" of it in honey, or...
- or because the sugar absorption is slowed down by butter/milk but the insulin-like substance absorbs more readily.
(So far I have NOT tried taking the honey alone and watching my possible reaction.)Does anyone have another hypothesis, explanation, or similar experience?
Is it even correct that low blood sugar can cause cold hands? I don't really know how I "came up" with that association.