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![]() The Bee Line The story behind City Hall's "rooftop honey"
On the third Thursday of each November, without fail, Paris sidewalks
become a bit more crowded as cafés and wine shops ceremoniously display
wooden sandwich boards announcing the arrival of a certain
much-anticipated wine harvest. For all of the year-round adoration
showered on their wines, nothing is quite as emphatic as the perennial
chorus: "Le Beaujolais Nouveau est arrivé!"
For the past few years, Chicago has had its own type of autumnal
harvest to boast, one that tends to be a tad stickier than wine. While
it may not produce the relaxing effect of a glass of crimson
Beaujolais,
Chicago's "Rooftop Honey" is crafted to the tunes of a lot of buzz
by
some 200,000 diligently working bees on top of City Hall.
As part of Mayor Daley's plan to green the city, two hives of
Italian honeybees have occupied the northwest corner of City Hall's
20,000-square-foot rooftop garden since they were installed in the
spring of 2003. While visiting Germany in 2000, Daley was inspired to
adopt aspects of urban agriculture that he saw. During the industrial
revolution, Europeans who gravitated toward city life in search of jobs
often brought their apiary skills with them from the countryside. The
ritual has continued on balconies and rooftops through the century. One
popular beekeeping operation in existence today is a group of five
hives
quietly perched atop Paris' opera house, Le Palais Garnier. 72-year
old
Jean Paucton, a retired props man, established the hives on the roof of
the opera house in 1985 after discovering another employee farming fish
in the basement. Like the Chicago City Hall bees, Paucton's gather
nectar in a five-mile radius that can include the trees and flowers
along the Champs-Elysees or in the picturesque Pere LaChaise cemetery.
The result of their labor, known for a delicate, spicy flavor, is pale
golden and intensely floral tasting. "Opera Honey" is sold in Paris
at
the opera house gift shop and the legendary bakery, Fauchon.
While honey can come in as many different varieties as wine--each
varietal is determined by the type of flower or plant pollinated by the
bees--here in Chicago, the major source of pollen is the vast amounts
of
clover found within the five-mile radius in which the bees pollinate.
This area includes Belmont Avenue to the north, 35th Street to the
south, Kedzie to the west and Lake Michigan to the east.
Back in 2003, Daley's go-to source for keeping bees was Stephanie
Averill. She had already made a name for herself as an urban apiarist
by
the hives she kept in her yard in Bucktown. "What's so amazing to me
is
that the bees really gave that rooftop a more positive spin by
incorporating urban agriculture," says Averill. "Bees are an
essential
part of nature. Through their presence on City Hall, we can see
agriculture within these concrete buildings."
Averill and her apiary partner Michael Thompson keep their honey
palettes finely tuned as they manage the City Hall honeybee project.
Thompson explains how the bees produce two different types of
honey--each with distinct flavor and color.
Honey produced from pollen during the spring/summer months is
"very light, almost a pale yellow-green." Declaring the batch
delicious, Thompson even claims, "It would be comparable against all
other honeys in the world." He and Averill agree that it is "in the
top ten percent of any honey they have ever tasted." Explaining that,
"on the worldwide market, lighter honey is more desirable," he
attributes high amounts of sweet white clover to the quality of the
light spring/summer batch. White aster and goldenrod are the major
nectar sources in the fall in Chicago. Thompson describes the honey
produced during the early fall as "dark amber, richer and more
complex--perhaps better used for cooking."
Gleaning the 200 pounds of honey per hive is accomplished in the
basement culinary center of Gallery 37, a city venue for youth
programs.
The honeycombs are put into an extractor after using a hot knife to
"de-cap"--skimming off the top layer of wax. The combs are spun until
the honey is ready to be removed via a spout at the bottom of the
machine.
And like fine wine, scarcity is a factor. While the project grows,
purchase of "Rooftop Honey" is limited to two jars per customer. Each two-ounce jar of "Rooftop Honey" sells for $2 at three
locations; Gallery 37, 66 East Randolph Street, the Chicago Cultural
Center, 78 East Washington Street and the Chicago Avenue Water Tower
and
Pumping Station, on North Michigan Avenue at Chicago Avenue. Proceeds
go
toward Chicago Cultural Center projects.
Also by Veronica Hinke
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