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View Full Version : Dehydrating Frozen Broccoli



Angela
05-03-2010, 09:22 AM
Adventures in Self Reliance (http://selfrelianceadventures.blogspot.com)

Frozen vegetables are perfect for dehydrating. They've already been blanched prior to being frozen and you can usually just dump them out on your dehydrator tray frozen and start drying. Super easy. This weekend I dried some broccoli. Broccoli is kind of large and thick straight out of the bag, so I let it sit on the counter and thaw a bit, then cut each larger chunk into 2-4 smaller pieces. You'd want it smaller anyway when you're going to eat it, and exposing the center of the stalk makes it dry faster.


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I loaded them on the dehydrator trays. One big 56 oz (3 lb. 8 oz.) bag of broccoli florets filled three dehydrator trays. Then I put the trays in the dehydrator. Because of the bulk of the floret heads, I loaded the trays every other slot in my Excalibur dehydrator. This is one of the benefits of this particular design of dehydrator--you can stick your trays in wherever you need to to accommodate whatever it is you're wanting to dry.


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Then I ran the dehydrator overnight. I didn't count the hours, but I wanted the broccoli good and dry. They should be crispy, not leathery. Here they are when they're done. That empty spot is where hubby snitched one. He likes to try out the dehydrated goods right off the tray. These were "tasty, but the stem is pretty tough" in case you were wondering.


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There you have it. Super easy. That whole giant bag filled three pint jars once it was dried.

AZ Prepper
05-03-2010, 10:46 AM
Very cool! Seems easy enough.

Northmountain
05-03-2010, 11:30 AM
Are you throwing in an Oxypack with them for long term storage? What container and storage method are you using? Vacuum? Mylar bags? Quart bottle with new lid? Vacuum packed in a quart bottle (new lid), etc., or are you planning on the shelf life in this example to last just long enough to used in making pots of soup in the coming year?

We are vacuum packing our dehydrated products in quart bottles with new lids and none have failed thus far, but we've only been doing it that way for a year, so that packing method has hardly been tested yet. We haven't used Oxypacks with them yet, but will probably do so for products that we expect to stay on the shelves for longer periods of time.

Angela
05-03-2010, 02:24 PM
I've just put it in jars with a new lid on them. They would store longer packed with an oxy pack in the jar or vacuum sealed in the jar or sealed in a mylar bag with oxy pack or foodsaver bag. The trouble with the bags on the broccoli is that it's kind of fragile. I don't want mine all crunched up by sucking the oxygen out, so it's in a jar, but I don't have the jar sealer attachment for my foodsaver or a stash of oxygen absorbers, so it's just in the jar with the lid screwed on tight on a dark shelf in my food room. I'm no expert, but I'd give it 5 years easy just stored like I have it--longer if you get the oxygen out.