Showing posts with label food dehydrator. Show all posts
Showing posts with label food dehydrator. Show all posts

4/15/2012

Camp Cooking: The Black Feather Guide: Eating Well in the Wild Review

Camp Cooking: The Black Feather Guide: Eating Well in the Wild
Average Reviews:

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I liked it, but its like a move you watch it once and it never gets watch again unless your truly bord and I have been a couple of time.

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Whether you're a beginner at camp cooking wondering how to set up a kitchen in the woods, or a more experienced camper looking for some new techniques and ideas, "Camp Cooking: The Black Feather Guide" can help.Wendy Grater and Mark Scriver of Black Feather Wilderness Adventures have been feeding groups of all sizes, on all kinds of outdoor trips, for roughly half a century combined. In "Camp Cooking: The Black Feather Guide", they share their extensive knowledge and proven methods so that you too can make your "on trip" meals successful. Beautiful photographs, clear instruction, humorous illustrations, and expert advice make this an indispensable guide for anyone who cooks when camping and who wants to eat well in the wild.This title includes over 60 recipes with both metric and imperial measurements.You'll learn: choosing and using equipment; planning and preparing meals with flavour, variety, nutrition, and style; packing techniques and recommendations; and, managing waste and respecting the environment.

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4/12/2012

Food Drying at Home The Natural Way, with over 300 Healthful and Delicious Recipes Review

Food Drying at Home The Natural Way, with over 300 Healthful and Delicious Recipes
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I got this book, hoping it would have ideas and tips for drying food without a dehydrator. I don't currently have one, and I wanted to be able to dry foods in my oven or outside. I was a little disappointed at first, but the author makes some very valid points about buying a good dehydrator. I'm looking for a good dehydrator now, but the good ones (stainless steel) alas are currently a bit much for my budget currently. Maybe in the near future. Once I get one, I'm sure this book will be wonderful, but right now, this book is just going on the bookshelf.

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4/01/2012

Solar food dryer: Preserves food for year-round use, using solar energy (Rodale plans) Review

Solar food dryer: Preserves food for year-round use, using solar energy (Rodale plans)
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The Solar Food Dryer book is well organized. The blueprints and cutting diagrams are excellant. The pouch within the book that holds the blueprints after they are detached from the book has meant that my copy, more than 15 years old, is still intact.
The faults lie in the suggested glazing materials for the solar collector. The book was published in 1981, and after a thorough search I have not been able to locate any of the plastic films in the materials list. Feel free to e-mail me with glazing suggestions.

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3/17/2012

Dry it - You'll Like it Review

Dry it - You'll Like it
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This is a friendlier, more personal book than Mary Bell's Complete Dehydrator Cookbook. There's not as much in it, in terms of content, but there are things in here Bell doesn't cover - like drying grains. (Make your own corn chips with this book!)
For those who don't have a dehydrator already, or for folks who like to build things themselves, there are detailed plans and instructions to build your own "living foods dehydrator."
If you were to own *only* one book for food dehydrating, go with Bell's book. If you like to have a cooking "library" (as I do), this book is a terrific addition to it. "Try" it - you'll like it!

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2/25/2012

High Trail Cookery: All-Natural, Home-Dried, Palate-Pleasing Meals for the Backpacker Review

High Trail Cookery: All-Natural, Home-Dried, Palate-Pleasing Meals for the Backpacker
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I was interested in this book because it advertised recipes for making your own dehydrated foods. But this book misses the point of wilderness tripping. The fact is most backcountry hikers want foods that can be mixed and matched as desired. All the recipes call for complex proteins such as eggs, milk, yogurt, meat that are prepared as a full meal (e.g., ham omelets) and then dehydrated. Because the egg and the ham are all mushed up with spices you can hardly choose to use the eggs in pancakes and the ham in chili stew. Instead, you must eat omelets. When I backpack I plan on dehydrating several basic goods: canned beans, green peppers, hamburger, etc. Then along with some common staples such as powdered eggs, flour, etc. I can vary my cooking as desired. This book has you cooking complex gourmet meals, dehydrating them and then eating exactly that on the trail.ALso, I don't know why the author would bother to dehydrate things such as eggs, yogurt, etc. One can easily buy powdered eggs and besides - have you ever tried dehyrating your own eggs? Your house will smell like a sewer! Finally, the book contains numerous recipes for muffins and breads. But all are prepared and baked at home. I have plenty of these recipes in my Joy of Cooking. What I would have been interested in is how to prepare such recipes infront of a campfire - but the author makes no mention of this.

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High Trail Cookery allows backpackers to cook hassle-free meals on the wilderness trail. Packing light-weight, delicious, home-dehydrated meals--featuring whole grains, beans, fresh vegetables, and fruits--is the nutritious and easy way to make camping fun. Many recipes are meatless or meat-optional.

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1/22/2012

Independence Days: A Guide to Sustainable Food Storage & Preservation Review

Independence Days: A Guide to Sustainable Food Storage and Preservation
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Independence Days is a book about food security. Like Sharon Astyk's two previous books (Depletion and Abundance; A Nation of Farmers), this one focuses on the need to assume personal responsibility for food self-sufficiency and for shortening the supply chain from farm/garden to table. Unlike Asktyk's previous books, this one is also a how-to, as well as a why-we-should, complete with helpful instructions for creating and managing a food storage pantry, preserving fresh foods, and cultivating a frugal and self-reliant life style.
Astyk's arguments for the importance of personal food security ("one of the central issues of our time") are compelling. A looming energy crisis, soil and water depletion, and the threat of global warming--these are all reasons to be concerned about the reliability of our food supply and the need to take personal control, as far as possible, over the food we put on our family's table. "Independence days" (a concept Astyk borrows from Carla Emery) are days when we're eating food we grow ourselves or obtain locally. For Astyk, true independence is freedom from the industrial food system that feeds most Americans.
Hence this book, which recommends various methods for food preservation (canning, pickling, dehydrating, fermenting); for purchasing, stocking, and storing food in pantry, root cellar, and freezer; for acquiring tools and equipment, in addition to adequate supplies of water, medicine, and other necessities; and for creating and using community resources. All of this advice is sound, helpful, and inspiring. It is also very credible, for Astyk practices what she preaches, and it's good to know that she has tried the methods that she advocates. The various sections are also illustrated with recipes, more or less effectively. Some of the recipes contain non-local foods--coconut milk, quinoa, salmon--which I found distracting in a book about shortening the supply chain, and not all of them illustrate the principle she'd like to teach: baked apples and cranberries are good comfort food but the recipe doesn't fit very comfortably in a section on medicines. Recipes/formulas for home-grown herbal remedies would have been a better choice.
But these are minor quibbles. I like Sharon Astyk because she always tells me why I should do something, before she tells me how, and this book continues that practice. "This isn't just about the rice or the garden or the canning jars," she says. "This is a small but important step in making a better way of life." Yes, truly. I learned from Independence Days, and it strengthened my desire to be as independent as possible. If you're concerned about food security, this is a good book to read and use. If you're not, read it anyway. You'll learn why the American food supply should be at the top of your list of things to think about.
by Susan Wittig Albert
for Story Circle Book Reviews
reviewing books by, for, and about women

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Hard times aren't just coming, they are here already. The recent economic collapse has seen millions of North Americans move from the middle class to being poor, and from poor to hungry. At the same time, the idea of eating locally is shifting from being a fringe activity for those who can afford it to an essential element of getting by. But aside from the locavores and slow foodies, who really knows how to eat outside of the supermarket and out of season? And who knows how to eat a diet based on easily stored and home preserved foods?
Independence Days tackles both the nuts and bolts of food preservation, as well as the host of broader issues tied to the creation of local diets. It includes:

How to buy in bulk and store food on the cheap
Techniques, from canning to dehydrating
Tools—what you need and what you don't
In addition, it focuses on how to live on a pantry diet year-round, how to preserve food on a community scale, and how to reduce reliance on industrial agriculture by creating vibrant local economies.
Better food, plentiful food, at a lower cost and with less energy expended: Independence Days is for all who want to build a sustainable food system and keep eating—even in hard times.
Sharon Astyk is a former academic who farms in upstate New York with her family. She is the author of Depletion and Abundance, the co-author of A Nation of Farmers, and she blogs at www.sharonastyk.com.


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12/10/2011

Yes, You Can And Freeze and Dry It, Too: The Modern Step-By-Step Guide to Preserving Food Review

Yes, You Can And Freeze and Dry It, Too: The Modern Step-By-Step Guide to Preserving Food
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Disclaimer: I work for the publisher of this book, but I didn't see it until I held my copy in my hands! (It was basically done when I started working for them.)
So-my review. I love this book! (I pretty much only review books if I love them, so you won't see me give too many less than stellar reviews.) This morning, I started my first project from it! I'm fermenting some extra collard greens. I went a little crazy at the Farmer's Market on Saturday. It was preview day. Anyway-
I have taken an interest in all of the home preservation interest lately, but I haven't really done much of it. When I lived in Pennsylvania, I would pit and freeze sour cherries by the bag-full, because they're so hard to find. But that was the extent of my food preservation. And even that was suspect. I would freeze the cherries with so much water in them that my pies would frequently not set. (I could have used Daniel's handy tip about freezing things like peas, cherries, corn, etc. on cookie sheets and THEN bagging them to avoid excess water.)
Tips like that (They're called "From the Tip Jar" in the book) are one of the reasons why I like this book so much! In addition to step-by-step instructions for each different preservation method (freezing, canning, drying, dehydrating, fermenting, pickling, etc.), there are tons of asides and tips. I learned a lot about food and cooking while reading the book.
I haven't tried much in the way of canning because I've been either 1) terrified of killing myself or loved ones with food poisoning or 2) I had yet to discover a book that would help me do it successfully without being overwhelming. I have to say, I really like the step-by-step photographs and the descriptions in this book. Many home canning books or pamphlets I've seen are mostly pen and ink illustrations, and those just don't do it for me.
This book seems like it would be great for new gardeners, people new to food preservation, and people interested in saving money. Also, I'm intrigued by the flavors and recipes in the book. I LOVE fermented pickles and they're almost impossible to find. Until I read this book, I didn't even realize that the reason why I love New York Deli pickles is because they're fermented, not pickled in vinegar.
I'm planning to try many different projects from the book, and it is making me think more about what I plant in my garden this summer so that I have things to experiment with. The author also gives strategies for getting great, in-season and affordable produce at farmer's markets, too.


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Preserving food is hot! The local food movement gains even more popularity as consumers return to vegetable gardening to grow their own food. They increasingly have become interested in the techniques for "putting up" their bounty. Driven by the recession; the need for healthier, chemical-free food,and taste, people everywhere are preserving the abundance of fruits, vegetables, and herbs harvested from their garden (or someone else's). You don't even have to grow your own to preserve freshness; non-gardeners too are learning to preserve with locally grown produce bought from local markets. Targeted at anyone who wants to capture the flavor of freshness, whether it's from making tomato sauce, drying herbs, or preserving jams and jellies.


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12/07/2011

The ABC's of Home Food Dehydration Review

The ABC's of Home Food Dehydration
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This book contained tons of information on various complicated (sulphuring? - Eww!) methods of home food dehydration. About two weeks after I read it (taking copious notes) an episode of Good Eats dealt with the subject of drying fruit, and I learned more in that half hour than I had in the two hours of reading. I will definitely use this as a reference guide, but I sure am glad Alton Brown tackled the subject!

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Every important facet of home food dehydrating is covered in this handy reference volume, which provides directions for making dozens of thrifty, healthy, do-it-yourself meals and covenience foods. Starting with a reminder of the "whys" of dehydrating foods, the book inspires its readers forward through chapters that carefully explain the various methods used to dehydrate and preserve foods. Pre-treatments and preparation of fruits, vegetables, herbs and meats are outlined in orderly detail, followed by useful dryness testing information and guidance on labeling, packaging and optimum storage conditions. The ABCs of Home Food Dehydration is a basic text for the industry - a book that belongs in every kitchen and food storage library! A rehydration section, with food items listed in alphabetical order, gives quick and easy reference and recipes when it's "time to put back the water" and to make the food table-ready.The second half of the book is filled with delicious recipes for using dehydrated foods - recipes that are simple to prepare and delicious to eat. A wide variety of foods are covered: apples, apricots, asparagus, chicken, coconut, comfrey, fish, fruit leather, granola, jerky, noodles, onions, papaya, peppers, persimmons, rhubarb, sage, squash, turkey, yogurt, and dozens of other foods. The list is comprehensive and the results are great!

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11/27/2011

Jerky: Make Your Own Delicious Jerky and Jerky Dishes Using Beef, Venison, Fish, or Fowl (A. D. Livingston Cookbook) Review

Jerky: Make Your Own Delicious Jerky and Jerky Dishes Using Beef, Venison, Fish, or Fowl (A. D. Livingston Cookbook)
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Livingston takes a definite outdoorsman approach to jerky. He is sharply critical of USDA safety regulations, and he doesn't believe in nitrate cure as a preservative (he includes it in a few recipes, but says it's for preserving the color of the meat, not as a safety procedure). Some of the air-drying recipes gave me the willies just thinking about them! Livingston's approach to safety is to use meat from trusted sources, which often means avoiding the local supermarket in favor of a butcher or processor. He says if you use meat from known sources you'll avoid many problems. Good advice, but not always practical.
The book is lively and readable, but too many of the recipes are for curing 10 pounds of meat -- I wish he'd included smaller-quantity versions of some of them.
This is NOT the definitive book for beginning jerky-makers, but it's probably a good buy for an experienced jerky-maker to add to his/her library.

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There's nothing like tasty, chewy jerky for satisfying those hunger cravings. Moreover, jerky is made from lean cuts of meat, so it's naturally low in fat and high in protein. Homemade jerky is far superior to the packaged kind, is much less expensive, and is surprisingly simple to make. A. D. Livingston shows you how, including: which cuts of meat to buy and how to prepare them; jerky drying methods; where to buy supplies and equipment; how to store jerky; mouthwatering recipes for beef, venison, fish, fowl, and exotic meats. For backpackers, country-living folks, jackleg cooks, and anyone who wants a snack that isn't junk food, Jerky is a welcome and unique cookbook."Your mouth will water just reading the recipes." -Sportsmen's Series: Big Game (a special edition of Fishing & Hunting News magazine)

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11/24/2011

How to Dry Foods Review

How to Dry Foods
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This is a fantastic reference for drying food.
The author takes the time to explain in detail the different methods of preparing food for dehydrating food. She discusses sulfiting, steaming, no prep. etc. The author also explains the various methods of drying food (oven, dehydrator etc.) The pictures only enhance the text. Further more, the author provides several charts (one for fruit, one for vegies, one for meat, one for herbs) regarding how well certain foods dry, how long each food will save when dried. I particularly liked the recipes that used dried foods.
This is a great book to have if you are interested in drying foods. I constantly refer to this book every time I dry the extra food we have on hand.

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A kitchen favorite for more than two decades-revised and expanded. Includes more than 100 irresistible recipes. When you dry food, you're saving everything: energy, nutrients, money, and, best of all, taste. This step-by-step guide to drying all kinds of fruits, vegetables, and nuts is also the most comprehensive reference available for methods of drying and home dehydrating equipment. The only book needed to master this age-old culinary tradition, How to Dry Foods includes: - Step-by-step instructions on how to dry a wide variety of foods - Updated information about equipment and drying techniques - More than 100 delicious recipes, from main courses to desserts and more - Helpful charts and tables for at-a-glance reference - Food safety tips - Clever crafts that are made from dried foods

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11/20/2011

Just Jerky : The Complete Guide to Making It Review

Just Jerky : The Complete Guide to Making It
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Compared to general-use cookbooks, those with a specific focus, such as this one, are directed at a narrower audience. They tend to be tougher to write because the consumer who picks it up expects more than a mere compilation of recipes. Mary Bell delivers!
Her first chapter covers the where's, why's and how's of jerky, even including its background history. She continues by going into more specific topics of preparation and storing the chewy morsels, covering a variety of methods and equipment which may be employed to achieve a variety of results.
What follows are about 100 pages of recipes. I was amazed to see how many different kinds of foods may be preserved this way. Sure, I've been making beef jerky for years, usually with a teriyaki marinade...and for variety, I'd add garlic this time, maybe curry powder the next. Who would have thought to write a jerky cookbook? I'm glad Mary did, though.
Don't get me wrong. If I'd given it a little thought, I would have come up with the idea of substituting pork or poultry for the beef. But never would I have considered using ground meat...or believe it or not, vegetarian jerky.
A few years ago, my husband and I were driving up the California coast, enjoying the scenery and the quaintness of the region, not to mention the clear blue waters of the Pacific near the Oregon border. Every few miles, we would see signs advertising little country stores that sold salmon jerky. We were intrigued enough to stop and sample some and wound up buying a bag to munch on while we drove or to eat at roadside tables in the forests of Northern California. Well, that had been our intention. It was so good, we polished off the bag fairly quickly. Unfortunately, we saw no more of these businesses the rest of our trip.
I've been looking for a recipe for this delicious snack ever since. I've done web searches, posted requests in a number of food newsgroups, asked friends, and talked about it to everyone I knew, but I came up with no way to duplicate it. Finally, I got Mary's book and there it was. (Can you tell how excited I am?) Not only salmon, but she also covers trout, cod, tuna, catfish, halibut, sole and other small panfish.
Vegetarian jerky? Sure...and you'll be amazed at what she's come up with. We're not just talking about vegetables, either.
And to finish it all off, here's a grabber for ya...jerky desserts!
No pictures and very few illustrations, but you don't miss them in this book. Matter of fact, I imagine all the jerky would start looking alike after awhile.
The format is great: easy to read, with the ingredients listed in boldface slightly larger than the instructions, and each recipe includes a little sidebar that enhances its corresponding dish, either informationally or via interesting anecdotes.
Very nicely done and highly recommended.

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Here's the do-it-yourself guide to making your own jerky in an oven, smoker, or food dehydrator with strips or ground beef, venison, poultry, fish and even soy protein.

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11/18/2011

Trail Food: Drying and Cooking Food for Backpacking and Paddling Review

Trail Food: Drying and Cooking Food for Backpacking and Paddling
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I have several books on dehydrating your own trail meals and this is easily the best. It is concise and full of good ideas and recipes. The guidance is flexible enough for the lightweight backpacker or for the canoe or pack mule traveler. For example, some of the recipes call for a dutch oven (too bulky and heavy for the lightweight backpacker) and others are suitable for a one pot meal (ideal for the lightweight backpacker).
A nice feature is the chart of drying temperatures and times for different foods. Also, the chart of calorie and protein content of different foods is important to making sure you get enough calories to keep going in the field and enough protein to keep your body from consuming your muscle tissue for fuel. There are also plans for building your own dehydrator for the do-it-yourselfer. The suggested one week meal plan is a good guide to get you started on packing for a trip.
The emphasis of this book is on drying individual ingredients and then rehydrating and combining them at meal time. This allows you to be more flexible in your meals, but takes a little longer at meal time. However, it also tells you how to use your own recipes to prepare a conmplete meal and then dehydrate it. Precooked spaghetti, rice or beans rehydrate and cook faster in the field. The book recommends having both types of meals with you for variety and flexibility. You can also dehydrate canned foods like vegetables or canned chicken, tuna or salmon and use them in your recipes.
This book is concise and a fast read, but packs a lot of information. This means that you need to pay attention to pick up all the important points. Fully half of the book gives infomration on dehydrating and meal planning as well as other important instructions and the other half gives some excellent recipes.
One important point (based on experience) is to be sure to try the recipes at home on the same stove and cooking utensels that you will have in the field. You want to make sure that you have everything you need and know how to use it BEFORE you are in the field and cold and wet and tired and hungry. That's not a good time to find out that you need another pot or that your pot isn't large enough to properly prepare your recipes!
"Trail Food" is all you need to dehydrate your own meals, but a few other general books on dehydrating wouldn't hurt to help you gain a full understanding of all the nuances of dehydrating.
Excellent book!

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" . . . a book that will appeal to everyone who has ever choked down the pre-packaged, bargain-basement camp food (or gone bankrupt buying the good stuff)."--Canoe & Kayak
. . . if you're on the lookout for a way to bring real meals to the field, [this book] might have the answer."--Field & Stream
Life in the outdoors revolves around food--cooking it, eating it, packing it, carrying it. We even fantasize about it, especially after a week of eating store-bought provisions. This book is all about fulfulling those food fantasies and avoiding those expensive disappointments. Trail Food tells you how to remove water from food, to make it lighter and longer-lasting, without removing its taste. Learn to plan menus and prepare meals just like the ones you left behind, using fresh foods from your garden or market, prepared and seasoned the way you like them.
Why fantasize when you can have the real thing?

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11/17/2011

The Solar Food Dryer: How to Make and Use Your Own Low-Cost, High Performance, Sun-Powered Food Dehydrator Review

The Solar Food Dryer: How to Make and Use Your Own Low-Cost, High Performance, Sun-Powered Food Dehydrator
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If you do any kind of homemaking, preserving, growing of your own food, etc., then you absolutely need to get this book! This will give you low-cost and realistic way to preserve your food naturally and in a way that keeps it tasting great! The step-by-step instructions for building the author's food dryer are top-notch and easy to follow, even for the non-mechanically inclined.
My only wish is that the author had included plans for the other food dryers mentioned, though a quick Google will supply this, so it's not really necessary.

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The Solar Food Dryer describes how to use solar energy to dry your food instead of costly electricity. With your own solar-powered food dryer, you can quickly and efficiently dry all your extra garden veggies, fruits, and herbs to preserve their goodness all year long—with free sunshine! Applicable to a wide geography—wherever gardens grow—this well-illustrated book includes:

• Complete step-by-step plans for building a high-performance, low-cost solar food dryer from readily available materials • Solar energy design concepts • Food drying tips and recipes • Resources, references, solar charts, and more

Eben Fodor is an organic gardener with a background in solar energy and engineering. He works as a community planning consultant in Eugene, Oregon.


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11/16/2011

Food Drying with an Attitude: A Fun and Fabulous Guide to Creating Snacks, Meals, and Crafts Review

Food Drying with an Attitude: A Fun and Fabulous Guide to Creating Snacks, Meals, and Crafts
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Since I already have Mary Bell's "Complete Dehydrator Cookbook", which showed so much more than I'd ever known before, the title of this book really got my attention. And the recipes!!! YUMMY!!!! I packed several items when I had to make a trip to my specialist (3 hours each way) and I saved money, ate delicious, nutritious foods and didn't have to do the "fast food" stops like before. Will be doing more before I take a flight to see my family soon so I don't have to deal with the expense and questionable nutritional value of airline food.
Also, I have a very small apartment and drying makes more sense than canning. For instance, 10 pounds of blueberries dried fill 2 quart jars and 15 pounds of Bing cherries fill 2 and one half quarts, plus there is so little risk of spoilage. It's so much fun and the dried foods can be used in so many fantastic ways. Try the Strawberry Meringue cookies!!!
This book is a fun, educational read and the pictures just makes one's mouth water.

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If you think you know all there is to know about food drying, think again: the innovative ideas and techniques in this book will put the excitement back into home food dehydrating.
This ultimate food drying resource has something for everyone: vegetarians, natural and raw food enthusiasts, hunters, fishermen, gourmet cooks, gardeners, farmers, hikers, and even fast food junkies. With more than thirty years of food drying experience, Mary T. Bell offers straightforward and practical instructions for drying everything from yogurt to sauerkraut to blue cheese, without ignoring traditional favorites such as jerky, mushrooms, and bananas. Throughout, Bell offers nutritional tips and highlights the time-, space-, and money-saving benefits of food dehydrating. Also included are descriptions of how various food dehydrators work to give readers a better understanding of the tools of the craft. Food Drying with an Attitude gives readers the recipes, instructions, and inspiration they need to get the most out of their home food dehydrators. 100 color illustrations

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11/14/2011

The Dehydrator Bible: Includes over 400 Recipes Review

The Dehydrator Bible: Includes over 400 Recipes
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It was not what I thought it would be. I assumed it was a book with different ways to dehydrate foods - seasonings etc - or different foods that could be dehydrated. Instead it is a book of recipes to cook using already dehydrated foods.

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The comprehensive handbook for dehydrating foods at home.

Dehydrating is one of the most effective ways to preserve food for maximum nutrition at very low cost. Sales of dehydrators are soaring as many cooks reject the suspect ingredients in commercially prepared foods. Dehydrating with the recipes in this book is one way to control all ingredients and please the whole family.

Recipes for dried ingredients include herbs and seasonings, fruits, fruit leathers, vegetables and beef jerky. These nutritious ingredients are included in delicious recipes such as:


Beef and potato stew
Chicken pot pie
Vegetable lasagna
Zucchini and red pepper fritters
Dried tomato and basil polenta
Mushroom, herb and white wine sauce
Strawberry rhubarb tarts.

These recipes appeal to a wide array of tastes, feature contemporary ingredients such as whole grains and work equally well in a home kitchen, on an RV, on a boat or at a campsite. Recommendations for buying a dehydrator and storing dehydrated foods are also included.

Easy-to-follow instructions with specific time guidelines and best practices and the latest data on food safety make this the ideal dehydrating guidebook and cookbook.


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Click here for more information about The Dehydrator Bible: Includes over 400 Recipes

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