To each his own.
This bit applies to honey extraction using an uncapping tank, and
tank-extractor --- not crush&strain.
I have a double strainer, but only use the bottom half of it.
You'll see why.
I contrived a hanger that suspends it from the honey-gate valve on
the extractor.
With the sieve suspended high enough I can see how full the bucket
is getting.
The (fine) hemispherical screen of the double strainer gets plugged
up with granulated sugar crystals and tiny bits of wax.
I have a big plastic spatula that i use to mix the honey with the
white stuff I scrape off the screen. Plastic won't damage the
screen.
We mix whenever the flow rate slows down.
(When finished extracting, after the strainer drains for two or
three days, the wax & honey crystals can be transferred to the
capping tank to drain some more) *** (btw, the bees do a really
nice job cleaning the screen ... vs washing it out)
As for the buckets of honey, let them "settle" for a day or two
while the bubbles/foam, bits of wax, etc. float up to the top.
With the back of a large spoon I clear the white "foam" from the
top.
Stick the back of the spoon down on the foam so the foam adheres,
and lift and rotate the spoon so most of the honey is left behind
and the surface isn't disturbed much. It takes practice to get
efficient. You won't get all the foam on the first pass; some finds
its way below the surface again. Repeat the settling and spooning
until perfect.
Remember to scrape the meniscus where the honey meets the side of
the bucket. Gunk accumulates there too.
Scrape the foam off the spoon into a jar to let IT settle for a day
or two.
Scrape that concentrated foam back into the capping tank to let the
honey drain from it.
***
Once cappings in the tank are well drained, I give them back to the
bees to clean up.
Put a medium or shallow box, or some shims on top of the inner
cover.
Spoon some of the cappings onto the inner cover, and give the bees
(in a moderately strong colony) a chance work the cappings over.
They lick off all the honey, and either use it for the brood, or
store it in the super below.
Stir daily. If you see SHB larva under the cappings, scrape them
out and into the wax melter immediately. Not a common problem)
When the bees done with the cappings, then put the remaining wax +
propolis + junk into the wax melter.
No cooked honey to deal with. No honey degradation with heat.
(no honey-rinse water either... and no drying of the cappings to
keep them from growing mold or whatever)
I've made most of the other mistakes, and this is what we settled
on.
Setups and priorities vary, so other approaches are likely to lead
to a happy beekeeper and happy bees.
Setting cappings out on a picnic table for bees to rob out may lead
to robbing in the yard, and some bee fatalities.
I don't find a feeding frenzy of bees to be an attractive look.
that's my 2¢