Freeze Dried Recipes

 When you freeze dry this recipe, you’ll end up with cookies you can eat as is or an awesome apple oatmeal dish you can serve for breakfast, lunch, dinner, snack, or any other name for a meal you can come up with.

 I use apples in the recipe below, but let’s be clear. Any fruit you like with your oatmeal would be delicious. Just keep in mind, it will get soggy. I highly prefer apples, but I’ve done blueberries, strawberries (not my favorite, but a lot of people love freeze dried strawberry oatmeal), peaches, bananas (pass), and raisins. I’ve even added raisins to the apple ones because, YUM.

 Also, any milk is fine. If you’re lactose intolerant or prefer not to use cow milk, then use almond milk, cashew milk, whatever you prefer. If you’re a huge milk fan, then by all means, go for the whole milk, 2% or skim. I wouldn’t do buttermilk or heavy cream because of the increased fat content, but other than that, you have a lot of leeway in what you use for your milk.

 Oats can be interchanged as well. I love rolled oats, but steel cut are delicious here, too. You can even use instant, but you won’t want to do a crockpot with those.

 Okay, so now that we’ve covered all of that, let’s talk about the importance of not putting too much liquid in your crockpot fruit oatmeal. When you’re cooking it – especially with apples, you’re going to have extra liquids as the apples cook on the bottom of the crockpot. This is the best, because your oats are absorbing all that yumminess. If you have too much liquid, it will make it difficult to add to the molds or even to load onto a tray. Let’s not even talk about the easily breakable parts AFTER it’s been freeze dried. The last thing you want to do is have a ruined freeze dried oatmeal product.

 I’ll add more pictures as I work my way through my calendar and do oatmeal again. There’s a video below on how to reconstitute this delicious treat.

 On the Harvest Right freeze drier – this works on all sizes – after putting the trays inside the drum on the shelves, I put in the drum cover (if you don’t have a drum cover, no worries) and then tighten the handle as I lock it shut. On the computer touch screen, I selected START > LIQUID > NOT-FROZEN > CONTINUE. After inputting the settings and making sure my drain tube is closed, I walk away.

 I have a habit of saying it’s going to take as long as it takes, because it’s true. Mine typically take about 36 hours – but that was back in Idaho. I live in Missouri now and things are supposed to be a whole lot more humid. The times haven’t changed much since we got here, though, so I’ll update you as needed. This also depends on how dense you pack your oatmeal and how much liquid is in it. So, long answer short – it’s going to take as long as it takes.

 Oh, I love this question. Ultimately, I love mylar bags. They’re my favorite way to store anything freeze dried, but a lot of people make great cases for mason jars. As long as you have the item completely freeze dried and stored in a lightless, airless, air tight container with an O2 absorber, your item will be just fine.

 Eggs are an essential staple that most food storages need and try to have. I’ve found multiple reasons to keep freeze dried eggs in my pantry every day and this is without having any real reason to stock up.

 If you asked me how many eggs I have on my counter right now? I’d have to be honest and say 17 dozen. Yep. You read that right. SEVENTEEN DOZEN.

 I have 6 kids – 5 of which are boys and they are hungry eaters. We eat eggs in the things we bake, in breakfast dishes with hashbrowns, lunches, dinners, and even snacks (my kids are obsessed with hard boiled eggs and all the things you can make with them).

 Unfortunately, I can’t freeze dry hard boiled eggs… wait, I haven’t tried that yet. I’ll let you know how they turn out (I’m adding them to my list of items I want to try as we speak!).

 Egg prices are transient. Some weeks I can get 5 dozen for $3.27 and some weeks they’re priced at $8.97. I’m not going to lie. On those weeks I’ve been known to ask if the eggs come from golden chickens. The weeks where eggs are under $5 for 5 dozen, I buy 4 boxes. This is because we go through 5 to 7 dozen on a light week.

 When I was going through my food storage needs, I realized I had hashbrowns, meat, peppers, flour, sweeteners, candy, ice cream, fajitas, and pizza – and more! but for the things I needed to put together like cakes, scrambled eggs, omelettes, bread, and casseroles I was going to need the binding power of eggs. Raw eggs. Not those rubbery pre-cooked scrambled eggs, either. I was going to need raw eggs.

 Reconstituting freeze dried egg powder is easy. The ratio of water to powder is simple to remember – 1:1. For whatever amount of egg powder you mix in a bowl you’ll add the same amount of water. One tablespoon of each. One cup of each. Nothing is easier than that!

 Super light. When you package the freeze dried eggs in Mylar, it doesn’t get any lighter! Well, unless it’s an empty bag, but that’s just weird.

 ***I use the medium freeze dryer from Harvest Right, so these measurements are specific to those trays. You’ll need to make adjustments according to your own freeze dryer tray sizes and what you’re comfortable doing.

 In my stainless steel trays that come with the freeze dryer or that I can buy extra, I can fit just over 4 cups of scrambled eggs. The measuring cup in the picture is 2 cups. I fill it twice. If you have the small version of the Harvest Right Freeze Dryer or the large version, your trays will hold a different amount since I have the medium size. You’ll want to measure and test.

Freeze Dried Pears

 They need to be mixed. The fat in the yolks when left intact makes it almost impossible for the freeze drying process to complete. When you mix them into a scrambled mixture, you’re releasing the fats and letting them become easier to lyophilize. It’s a word. I promise.

 You don’t want to slop eggs all over the place. So putting them on the tray and then putting them in the freeze dryer straight away will not work. I don’t care how steady your hands are. Sliding your tray into the shelves is not always steady either. Sometimes you hit the lips in the back and have to adjust the trays to get them in. That’s more movement you’re putting on liquid eggs.

 If you do any of that with a raw egg mixture that hasn’t been prefrozen, you’re asking for a mess. Trust me. It isn’t pretty.

 So, the best way to do it is to find a flat space in your freezer. I have two upright freezers full of food (I’m working on emptying them!) and there’s no room on those shelves. The bottom pull out freezer of my fridge inside the house has drawers and they’re obviously full. I have a family to feed, people! Full freezers are a necessity.

 So, when left to my own resources, I found out that one of my trays will fit underneath the drawer in my bottom freezer. Crazy, right? But let’s be honest, when you need space and you can’t compromise and you don’t have room for anything else anywhere, you do what you gotta do.

 This is the space in my freezer I’m talking about. You can see where my stuff is piled in the top shelf and the pull-out drawer. Is that broccoli? I’m going to freeze dry it!

 The lighting isn’t good and this is with a flash and a ton of lights glowing in there. One of the drawbacks of a pull out freezer.

 Once that’s in place and I’ve mixed the eggs really well in the measuring cup, I squeezed the full cup into the small space and poured the egg mixture into the tray. Then I refilled the cup and did it again. The eggs settled into the tray and I slowly closed the drawer.

 Obviously, I prayed the whole time that the drawer wasn’t going to knock the tray over. Can you imagine if eggs spilled all over the place? Shudder. That’s a mess, I’m just not interested in dealing with.

 Once I opened the drawer three hours later, I was able to pull out the tray without worrying it was going to spill everywhere. If you’re not sure if that’s long enough, then leave it in as long as you need to. I’ve gone overnight before. You do what you gotta do.

 I can then freely store the frozen trays anywhere I want, stacked up or otherwise, in the other freezers while I do the next tray.

 I would only do eggs if I had another load already in the freeze dryer so I’m not wasting time doing the trays of eggs.

 That glossy dark coloring is evidence that they’re still wet, but frozen. I like how you can kind of see the egg shapes in there. Once they’re all ready, I put them onto the shelves in the freeze dryer.

 Then there’s the final dry which is essentially the same thing, but with a time associated with it as it gets closer to being finished.

 For eggs, I don’t press pre-frozen when the option comes up. I select not frozen, but I definitely select the liquid option. These eggs were dangerously liquid when they were unfrozen.

 The reason this saves time is because the pre-frozen setting demands 30 minutes of pre-freezing. I’m not the biggest fan of waiting for anything. I figure eggs frozen solid aren’t going to thaw in the 30 minutes it will take during a normal session to freeze. Your choice how you go forward, though. Harvest Right recommends pre-freezing and I’m not one to tell others to buck the rules. I do that on my own.

Breeui

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