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Simple Secrets of Food Dehydration
The Survival Mom ^ | June 18th, 2009 | ChocChipCookie

Posted on 06/20/2009 5:23:10 PM PDT by appleseed

Buying canned groceries and extra bags of flour and sugar have been the easiest part of food storage for me. Dehydrating my own food seemed to belong in the same category as spinning my own wool. Yes, it can be done, but why would I want to go through all the trouble??!

I found out for myself that dehydrating my own food is one of the easiest and least expensive ways to stock up. Now, if I say it’s easy, you know. It’s easy! The foods are fresh with no additives of any kind, so I know exactly what my family is consuming. I save money since commercially dried fruits and herbs, in particular, have a premium price at the market.

I purchased a NESCO American Harvest dehydrater on Craigslist for $30 one January morning and went to work. I’ve had some hits and misses, but here is what I’ve had the best luck with so far.

Canned peaches. Easy, easy, easy and so good! Buy #10 cans of peaches at Costco for $5 or so. Pour the fruit into a colander and rinse with water. Lay out the peach slices on the dehydrator trays and dry at a medium setting until the peaches are chewy. These are a great travel snack and will last for years if you store them using a Foodsaver system.

Herbs. It’s amazing how quickly these dry and are ready for storage. Kellene over at Preparedness Pro recently wrote a great article about growing and and preserving herbs. I love having jars of fresh herbs and have saved a pretty penny because I no longer have to buy fresh and then need them for a recipe only after they’ve turned slimy.

Applesauce! Buy a #10 can of applesauce at Costco for right around $5. Spread a thin layer of applesauce on a plastic tray and dehydrate. When it is dry, you have your own fruit leather! Roll it up, and store. Add cinnamon, pureed strawberries or peaches, or anything else you can think of for variety. My kids love this treat.

Mushrooms. This is another veggie that spoils all too quickly. Slice, dry, store. Couldn’t be easier! Dried shrooms can even be ground into a powder and added to sauces and gravies for flavor. Sliced carrots and celery. These are a staple in my soups and stews, and I hate having to run out to the store when I don’t have them on hand. Again, slice, dry, store!

One of my camping-crazy friends dehydrates sheets of spaghetti sauce, rehydrates them with water over a campstove and has almost-instant pasta sauce. She’s also been known to make hamburger rocks in her dehydrator.

It does take time to prepare the fresh food to dry (peel, slice, chop, etc.), but once they’re on the dehydrator trays and a timer is set, I can spend my time chasing kids and doing laundry.

This doesn’t have to be an expensive hobby. Seek out farmer’s markets, produce co-ops, produce stands, and the like to get the freshest food at the lowest prices. Check Craiglist, Freecyle and eBay for bargains on dehydrators. The Excalibur brand is considered to be top of the line, but there are directions online for making your own from scratch.

For more specific how-to details, check out these websites, and have fun dehydrating your own foods!

Budget 101 – Dehydrated Foods

Mother Earth News


TOPICS: Chit/Chat; Food; Gardening; Outdoors
KEYWORDS: preppers; survivalists
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To: PatriotGirl827
You will laugh. Mine is 25 years old. Basically a dehydrator is just a machine to blow warm air. Just make sure you get one that you can clean the trays easily and do one tray or 6 at a time. If you have a Walmart I would go there. The woke is in the prep. Make sure the stuff it dry.
I would spend a little more money and get a vacuum sealer. I love that thing. I use it to vacuum seal just about everything. I have the plastic jars with it and can vacuum marinade meat and poultry too. I will flash freeze fruit on a tray in the freezer and then vacuum seal it. When you dehydrate stuff you can vacuum seal it and it will keep for ever. It stores nice too.
41 posted on 06/21/2009 6:29:02 AM PDT by 70th Division (I love my country but fear my government!)
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To: appleseed

After posting I reread this article. MOTHER EARTH NEWS. OMG. I remember that mag in the 70s. Great articles. But I never wanted to go back to the land. LOL I did however want to build one of those Russian fireplaces though. Thanks for the post. Dehydration is one of those “work a little wait a lot” types of jobs like making beer or wine. I like that. I have a way to make coconut that will knock you socks off.


42 posted on 06/21/2009 6:33:07 AM PDT by 70th Division (I love my country but fear my government!)
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To: Big Giant Head; Big Giant Air Head

Dehydrating ping! I never thought about drying ‘shrooms before, but it makes sense. They are very expensive dried. Next $.99 sale, I’m doing this!


43 posted on 06/21/2009 6:49:02 AM PDT by Marie Antoinette (Proud Clinton-hater since 1998.)
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To: PatriotGirl827
Try this method to see if dehydrating is for you before you commit to a specialized unit:

Alton Brown's dehydrator

44 posted on 06/21/2009 7:45:31 AM PDT by whd23
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To: toomanygrasshoppers

ping


45 posted on 06/21/2009 7:58:51 AM PDT by FrogHawk (watchforlowflyingfrogs)
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To: alicewonders

My daughter has a very large plastic one she bought on line. It has a hose and valve, and she uses it to water her plants.


46 posted on 06/21/2009 8:09:30 AM PDT by KYGrandma
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To: whd23; 70th Division

Thank you for the suggestions! I just tried canning for the first time ever, and I am really enjoying it.

I have a very large Mango tree in my yard that produced about 350 Mangos this season. So we have made Mango jam, Mango salsa, and Mango chutney. Now I am going to try dehrydating them.


47 posted on 06/21/2009 10:13:54 AM PDT by PatriotGirl827 (Pray for the United States of America!)
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To: appleseed

I always keep a couple cans of dehydrated water in the pantry just in case.


48 posted on 06/21/2009 10:15:51 AM PDT by mysterio
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To: mysterio

As long as it’s not hydrogen hydroxide. ;)


49 posted on 06/27/2009 8:41:39 PM PDT by Professional Engineer (Yo ho ho and a thousand trucks, Gonna take a bath with a Rubber Duck...)
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To: appleseed

saved for later, thanks all.


50 posted on 06/27/2009 9:08:20 PM PDT by annieokie (i)
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