I'm hoping to do an extract brew using honey, something along the lines of waggle dance / humdinger. Has anyone got any recipes I can work from please? Any advice on what honey to use and when to use it in the brew would be great.

Thanks all.
NORTHERN BREWER'S WHITE HOUSE HONEY ALE
Official NORTHERN BREWER Instructional Document
An original recipe brewed by White House staff and shared with the world as a Northern Brewer kit. Built on a big foundation of malt with strong tones of biscuit and toffee, White House Honey Ale plays down hop bitter¬ness and plays up the fruity and caramelly aspect of English malt and yeast. A late addition of pure honey is the signature calling card of this recipe, imbuing a floral aroma and lightening the body. Ale to the chief!
O.G: 1.062
READY: 4 WEEKS
1 week primary, 2 weeks secondary, 1–2 weeks bottle conditioning
KIT INVENTORY:
SPECIALTY GRAIN
--0.75 lbs English Medium Crystal Malt
--0.5 lbs Belgian Biscuit Malt
FERMENTABLES
--6.3 lbs Gold malt syrup (boil for 60 min)
--1 lb Gold dry malt extract (boil for 60 min)
--1 lb Honey (boil for 5 min)
HOPS & FLAVORINGS
--1.5 oz East Kent Goldings (boil for 45 min)
--1.5 oz UK Fuggles (boil for 15 min)
YEAST
--DRY YEAST (DEFAULT): Danstar Windsor Ale. Optimum temperature: 64-70°F
--LIQUID YEAST OPTION: Wyeast #1332 Northwest Ale Yeast. Optimum temperature: 64–72°F
PRIMING SUGAR
--5 oz Priming Sugar (save for Bottling Day)
BEFORE YOU BEGIN ...
MINIMUM REQUIREMENTS
--Homebrewing starter kit for brewing 5 gallon batches
--Boiling kettle of at least 3.5 gallons capacity
--Approximately two cases of either 12 oz or 22 oz pry-off style beer bottles
UNPACK THE KIT
--Refrigerate the yeast upon arrival
--Locate the Kit Inventory (above) – this is the recipe for your beer, so keep it handy
--Doublecheck the box contents vs. the Kit Inventory
--Contact us immediately if you have any ques¬tions or concerns!
PROCEDURE
A FEW DAYS BEFORE BREWING DAY
1. If you chose liquid yeast: remove the pack from the refrigerator, and “smack” as shown on the back of the yeast package. Leave it in a warm place (70–80° F) to incubate until the pack begins to inflate. Allow at least 3 hours for inflation; some packs may take up to several days to show inflation. Do not brew with inactive yeast — we can replace the yeast, but not a batch that fails to ferment properly. If you are using dry yeast, no action is needed.
ON BREWING DAY
2. Collect and heat 2.5 gallons of water.
3. Steep specialty grain. Pour crushed grain into supplied mesh bag and tie the open end in a kno t. Steep for 20 minutes or until water reaches 170°F. Remove bag and discard.
4. Bring to a boil and add malt syrup and dry malt extract. Remove the kettle from the burner and stir in 6.6 lbs of Gold malt syrup and 1 lb Gold dr y malt extract.
5. Return wort to boil and boil for 60 minutes. The mixture is now called “wort”, the brewer’s term for unfermented beer.
--Add 1.5 oz East Kent Goldings hops 45 minutes before the end of the boil.
--Add 1.5 oz UK Fuggles hops 15 minutes before the end of the boil.
--Add 1 lb Honey 5 minutes before the end of the boil.
6. Cool the wort. When the 60-minute boil is finished, cool the wort to approximately 100° F as rapidly as possible. Use a wort chiller, or put the kettle in an ice bath in your sink.
7. Sanitize fermenting equipment and yeast pack. While the wort cools, sanitize the fermenting equipment – fermenter, lid or stopper, fermentation lock, funnel, etc – along with the yeast pack and a pair of scissors.
8. Fill primary fermenter with 2 gallons of cold water, then pour in the cooled wort. Leave any thick sludge in the bottom of the kettle.
9. Add more cold water as needed to bring the volume to 5 gallons.
10. Aerate the wort. Seal the fermenter and rock back and forth to splash for a few minutes, or use an aeration system and diffusion stone.
11. OPTIONAL: if you have our Mad Brewer Upgrade or Gravity Testing kits, measure specific gravity of the wort with a hydrometer and record.
12. Add yeast once the temperature of the wort is 78°F or lower (not warm to the touch). Use the sanitized scissors to cut off a corner of the yeast pack, and carefully pour the yeast into the primary fermenter.
13. Seal the fermenter. Add approximately 1 tablespoon of water to the sanitized fermentation lock. Insert the lock into rubber stopper or lid, and seal the fermenter.
14. Move the fermenter to a warm, dark, quiet spot until fermentation begins.
BEYOND BREWING DAY, WEEKS 1–2
15. Active fermentation begins. Within approximately 48 hours of Brewing Day, active fermentation will begin – there will be a cap of foam on the surface of the beer, and you may see bubbles come through the fermenta¬tion lock. The optimum fermentation temperature for this beer is 60–72º F – move the fermenter to a warmer or cooler spot as needed.
16. Active fermentation ends. Approximately 1–2 weeks after brewing day, active fermentation will end: the cap of foam falls back into the new beer, bubbling in the fermentation lock slows down or stops.
17. Transfer beer to secondary fermenter. Sanitize siphoning equipment and an airlock and carboy bung or stopper. Siphon the beer from the primary fermenter into the secondary.
BEYOND BREWING DAY— SECONDARY FERMENTATION
18. Secondary fermentation. Allow the beer to condi¬tion in the secondary fermenter for 1-2 weeks before proceeding with the next step. Timing now is somewhat flexible.
BOTTLING DAY—ABOUT 1 MONTH AFTER BREWING DAY
19. Sanitize siphoning and bottling equipment.
20. Mix a priming solution (a measured amount of sugar dissolved in water to carbonate the bottled beer) of 2/3 cup priming sugar in 16 oz water. Bring the solution to a boil and pour into the bottling bucket.
21. Siphon beer into bottling bucket and mix with priming solution. Stir gently to mix—don’t splash.
22. Fill and cap bottles.
1–2 WEEKS AFTER BOTTLING DAY 23. Condition bottles at room temperature for 1–2 weeks. After this point, the bottles can be stored cool or cold.
24. Serving. Pour into a clean glass, being careful to leave the layer of sediment at the bottom of the bottle. Cheers!
I agree. I've brewed with honey lots of times--added to fairly typical recipes, also braggot, wormwood honeywine, mead, melomel, rhodomel, etc--and I'm always careful not to boil it.floydmeddler wrote:...Don't boil your honey - you'll destroy those delicate flavours... and I don't care what the president of the United States says!
seymour wrote:I'd recommend boiling the main batch as usual, then at flame-out, immediately pour-in the honey. It'll still be hot enough to sterilize, but hopefully not blast all the delicate aromas away.
That's true, and an even better suggestion if you want maximum honey aroma and plan to drink through the whole batch relatively fresh.floydmeddler wrote:seymour wrote:I'd recommend boiling the main batch as usual, then at flame-out, immediately pour-in the honey. It'll still be hot enough to sterilize, but hopefully not blast all the delicate aromas away.
That's 100c - so boiling point. Plus, there is still the vigorous primary ferment which could bast away those delicate flavours as well.
Adding to primary after the ferment has died down will give good results too.