Manuka honey occupies a unique place in Australia’s honey industry, with distinct qualities linked to specific nectar sources and natural compounds. Unlike standard honey varieties, manuka is produced when bees collect nectar from Leptospermum plants — species that thrive in certain bushland and forest regions. Along the coastal and inland areas of New South Wales, these native plants become a significant part of the local foraging environment, shaping the honey’s characteristics through seasonal flowering patterns and the climatic conditions in which they grow.
Honey producers in these areas tend to focus on methods that preserve the product as closely as possible to its original form. Low-temperature extraction is a common technique that helps preserve natural elements such as enzymes and pollen, which can be denatured or altered by high-heat processing.
Among the range of manuka products, Manuka Honey MGO 1200 represents a higher level of naturally occurring methylglyoxal (MGO), a compound that forms in honey through the conversion of dihydroxyacetone found in Leptospermum nectar. Higher MGO figures generally indicate a stronger presence of this compound compared to lower-rated varieties, and they are often labelled accordingly to show that distinction. This higher rating is one factor that makes such honey stand out within a broader assortment of raw Australian honeys, as it tends to exhibit deeper colour or a more concentrated profile due to its floral source and the environment in which it was collected.