Tag: dehydrating

  • Dehydrating Food: A Beginner’s Guide

    Dehydrating Food: A Beginner’s Guide

    Dehydrating is a great option for preserving food for the long term, especially for gardeners or homesteaders. But even if you’re just an urban homesteader, it might be an excellent way to get started with food preservation. If you like to shop sales, frequent farmer’s markets, or grow veggies or herbs in your own little urban homestead, dehydrating is a great way to maximize your finds and easily store food for the long term.

    Here are some of the benefits to dehydrating vs. other food preservation methods:

    • it preserves the nutritional content of food
    • it condenses food and also makes it very lightweight, which is great for storage
    • it requires very little work to do
    • you can preserve a wide variety of foods with the same process

    Getting started 

    To get started, you will most likely want to purchase a dehydrator, but you can also dehydrate food using your oven. You simply put your oven on its lowest setting, crack the door, and let your food dehydrate for 6-24 hours, depending on what you are dehydrating.

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    There are many dehydrators on the market, that range in size and efficiency. You will want to consider how much food you want to dehydrate at once, the storage space you have for it in your kitchen, how well-reviewed the model you’re looking at is, etc.

    What to dehydrate

    Once you have purchased a dehydrator, the sky is the limit on what you can dehydrate! You’d be surprised how much you can do with a dehydrator, from making jerky and pemmican to quickly rising dough and, of course, drying fruits, vegetables, and herbs. While there are many foods you can dry, here are some of the most popular and efficient foods to store by dehydration.

    • Apples
    • Oranges
    • Bananas
    • Berries
    • Fruit leather
    • Tomato sauce
    • Herbs
    • Peppers
    • Meat (for jerky)
    • Eggs (for powdered eggs)

    Most dehydrators will have a guide for what temperature to set for which type of food product you are drying, but you might need to adjust accordingly since not every food product will have the same level of moisture. Typically, you will dry stuff for a long period of time, from 6-24 and maybe even 48 hours.

    This long drying time doesn’t require much at all, all you need to do is process what you’re drying and lay it out in an even, thin layer on the trays of your dehydrator. You’ll want to check occasionally to see what kind of progress is being made. Most commonly, people will set their dehydrator up in the evening and dry overnight.

    Dehydrating is an age-old method of drying food that you might find becomes a staple method of food production and food preservation in your home. Just give it a try and see how you like it!

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  • A Simple Guide to Dehydrating Mushrooms

    A Simple Guide to Dehydrating Mushrooms

    We posted recently about foraging for wild mushrooms and how to identify them.

    One great reason to forage for wild mushrooms is to stock up on them and keep them around for cooking or even as part of your survival food cache.

    But how do you store them?

    Dehydrating is the best method for mushrooms, and often, when you find them in the grocery store, this is how they have been processed.

    It’s very simple and easy to dehydrate mushrooms, here’s how:

    1. Collect the mushrooms you’d like to process. Literally any variety will do, but of course, you’ll probably want to do this with large batches of whatever you’ve collected from foraging.
    2. Wash the mushrooms thoroughly; you might need to use a mushroom or vegetable brush to gently scrub the dirt off.
    3. Pat dry with a paper towel and spread out to dry on a dish towel.
    4. Once most of the excess moisture has dried off, slice your mushrooms into whatever size you’d like to preserve them. Thin slices will dehydrate quickest.
    5. Once they’re cut the way you’d like, spread them out on your dehydrator sheets.
    6. Set your dehydrator to 125 degrees (which is probably the “vegetable” setting) and leave for 4-6 hours. After 4 hours, check to see the progress.
    7. They’re done when they are completely crisp and will snap and break when you bend them, rather than flex.
    8. Store in an airtight container in your pantry or wherever you keep long-term storage. If stored in mylar or vacuum-sealed pouches, they can keep for up to 20 years on a cool, dry shelf!

    Mushrooms are a great source of nutrients that can be foraged in many areas. Not only is it important to learn to identify them, but preserve them also! The next time you go out hunting for mushrooms, bring a load home and store some up in your food cache.

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