Dehydrated Meals

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Dave in AZ

Rank II

Enthusiast III

443
Arizona, USA
First Name
Dave
Last Name
Mac
Chop up ham, carrots, celery, green peppers to 1/4" chunks. Sprinkle veg with salt to help extract moisture. Dehydrate them. I would do this at 160f or above for pathogen lethality and come caramelization.

Per USFDA, A water activity below 0.85 is safe for shelf stable as no foodborne illness grows. Molds that are safe can grow down to Aw 0.7. There are charts to guesstimate Aw from % weightloss if you don't have a $600 Aw meter. But think of dry jerky as an example.

A good stew, 1L serves 2, approx 4c:
Dry powdered Bouillon for 1L
Dehyd. Ham, carrots, celery etc as desired
2 packages ramen
2 packs of the ramen seasonings
3T potato starch, NOT dried potatoes!

Add 1L boiling water, stir.
The potato starch will thicken nicely at these temps without boiling to a clear look like corn starch.
All rest will rehydrate.

Shelf stability comes from ensuring sufficient dryness. Lowering pH with citric acid massively increases shelf stability, think of Sinigong soups or Thai hot and sour soups, if you like those.20240203_225349.jpg
 
Last edited:

liburto

Rank 0

Contributor II

38
Winston-Salem, NC
First Name
David
Last Name
Parkes
My favorites are bell peppers, mushrooms, and dried meat. I usually dry beef in various dried meat forms, but I honestly prefer the basic ground beef mixture, which involves lightly browning the beef to remove fat and then mixing it with flour. I’ve never tried drying potatoes, partly because you can buy dried mashed potatoes cheaply, and it’s quite good (one of the few dried foods worth buying)