Clues from Queen Beyoncé were scant, but enough to fuel speculation and gossip. Finally, Beyoncé’s mysterious foe “Becky with the good hair” wasn’t just a lyric. She had a real life name, her fans are sure, and it wasn’t “Becky.”

It was …. Rachael Ray? That 30-minute-meal-making homewrecker who loves posting photos of her sexy … artichoke burgers?

Oops. Wrong Rachael.

That didn’t stop the hive.

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Blinded by loyalty and late-night angst, Beyoncé’s fan base mixed up some vowels in their fervid Google search. Instead of finding their actual target, a woman whose name is Rachel Roy, many landed on poor Rachael Ray.

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On Twitter, Instagram and Facebook, the hive, ruthless and unrelenting, attacked.

Ray’s photos of sultry sandwiches and her 11-year-old dog, Isaboo (in honor of National Pet Parent Day), were peppered with the most cutting of insults.

“Oh I loved hot chicken fajitas but I will never make them again after what you did you did to the Queen,” wrote one user.

“Never watchin ur show again Rachel u r a homewrecker!” wrote another.

One commenter, basking in the glory of his own analogy, said: “… you better cook up a new man b4 I roll up with beehive and sting your a** until you go into anaphylactic shock @rachaelray.”

Ouch.

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Rachael Ray has not responded to the case of mistaken identity. Rachel Roy, a fashion designer, did get in on the act briefly, posting on Instagram and then deleting on Instagram comments such as “good hair, don’t care,” according to numerous news outlets. “Rachel Roy ‘Furious’ With Beyonce For Singing About Alleged Jay Z Affair” said Hollywood Life.

“‘Rachel is so upset that she was called out and had to make her Instagram private from all the backlash,’ a source revealed to HollywoodLife.com EXCLUSIVELY. Becky is totally a reference to her, that’s what Beyoncé refers to her as and she is furious Beyoncé would do this.”

Beyoncé’s album, a combination of visuals, spoken word and song, premiered as an HBO special Saturday and has been streaming exclusively on Tidal, which has limited subscribers. The album was supposed to be released on iTunes at midnight Sunday, reported the New York Times, but that never happened.