Dehydrating Foods At Home - Getting Started
By Alan Kesselheim.
I heard of a woman who dried fruit for her next outing while she was off on the trail. She made sure to park her car in the sun at the trailhead, then placed trays of cut-up fruit on the shelf beneath the back window. By the time she returned, all she had to do was pop it into bags!
While the basic concept hasn't changed since early man, helpful appliances have multiplied dramatically. You can choose to start simply, as simply as using the sun as your oven, and evolve as necessary. There is no need to jump into a full-fledged food drying program, with all the hardware, until you're sure of your commitment.
If you're a builder, and want to be economical, consider constructing your own appliance. A friend of mine made a dehydrator the size of a walk-in closet, capable of drying hundreds of pounds of produce at a whack.
I'm not a confident builder, and I figure that the years of design work that go into making an efficient, commercially marketed dehydrator are worth the expense.
Before you choose, ask yourself the following key questions:
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