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I just got a dehydrator, I have to wait a while before I can order some special

trays that will allow me to make fruit leather or other things that are too

liquid to place on the regular screen. My question is, is there something I

could use to say line the screens with to allow me to dry liquidy stuff until I

get the trays?

no fear, only faith; no guilt, only grace; no pride, only praise; no claim, only

Christ

---------------------------------

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  • 4 weeks later...

The recipe that I have for making jerky is for 110 degrees to begin with,

and then

turn it down a little. , you need to be able to control the

temperature. Can

you take that one back? My Excaliber dehydrator goes from 80-145 degrees.

You

can find them on line.

JoAnn

On 12/18/05, Lana Gibbons <lana.m.gibbons@...> wrote:

>

> It is definately overkill for herbs, nuts and more delicate items.

> However, 145-165 is normal dehydrator temp for jerky as far as I know.

>

> -Lana

>

> On 12/18/05, Siemens <mandamom2many@...> wrote:

> > I have a nesco dehydrator, it only has an on and off no temp control.

> I

> > thought it felt aweful hot so I stuck an instant read meat thermometer

> in

> > it

> > and it said 150* F. Is this cooking the food? I love my jerky and

> crispy

> > nuts and what not but am I defeating the purpose? Wouldn't enzymes be

> > killed

> > at that temperature? Or are they tough enough to be ok? HELP!!! If this

> is

> > cooking my food I am going to be very angry, very angry indeed (doing

> my

> > marvin the martian impersonation LOL).

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Great, NOW what do I do? My oven doesn't go any lower than 200F and I can't

afford another dehydrator. I love my crispy nuts ::WAHH!!!!:

On 12/18/05, Lana Gibbons <lana.m.gibbons@...> wrote:

>

> It is definately overkill for herbs, nuts and more delicate items.

> However, 145-165 is normal dehydrator temp for jerky as far as I know.

>

> -Lana

--

Mrs. () Siemens

Mommy to Zack and Liddy...so far

no fear, only faith; no guilt, only grace; no pride, only praise; no claim,

only Christ

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No I can't take it back, I no longer have the reciept and even if I could

that would just leave me with nothing, I was only able to get THIS one

because is was only $20 CAN and we found it in a store so there was no

shipping. I would LOVE an excaliber that is the one I REALLY wanted but it

will be a looooooong time before I'll be able to afford it. I could try

using toothpicks or something to prop the trays open a bit to let some heat

escape? Would that help you think?

On 12/19/05, JoAnn SkyWatcher <joann.skywatcher@...> wrote:

>

> , you need to be able to control the

> temperature. Can

> you take that one back? My Excaliber dehydrator goes from 80-145 degrees.

> You

> can find them on line.

--

Mrs. () Siemens

Mommy to Zack and Liddy...so far

no fear, only faith; no guilt, only grace; no pride, only praise; no claim,

only Christ

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I found a giant harvestmaid dehydrator that goes from 90-145 for only

like $7 at a thrift store. This thing has 4 trays and is over 2.5ft

wide!

You can still make crispy nuts with the dehydrator, but they will be

enzymeless.

-

> > > I have a nesco dehydrator, it only has an on and off no temp

control.

> > I

> > > thought it felt aweful hot so I stuck an instant read meat

thermometer

> > in

> > > it

> > > and it said 150* F. Is this cooking the food? I love my jerky and

> > crispy

> > > nuts and what not but am I defeating the purpose? Wouldn't

enzymes be

> > > killed

> > > at that temperature? Or are they tough enough to be ok? HELP!!!

If this

> > is

> > > cooking my food I am going to be very angry, very angry indeed

(doing

> > my

> > > marvin the martian impersonation LOL).

>

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Siemens wrote:

>Great, NOW what do I do? My oven doesn't go any lower than 200F and I can't

>afford another dehydrator. I love my crispy nuts ::WAHH!!!!:

>

>

>

I do my nuts at 145 in my dehydrator. There was a discussion here a

while back that there is a risk of mold if you dry the nuts at too low a

temp. Sally says to do them at 150 in NT.

Steph

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I have never found one at a thrift store, but I always keep my eyes open.

Not that I have any money, I had to add all my spending money to the grocery

budget to afford switching back to NT eating (I want to scream when I see a

pound of butter for $4.00 next to a 4 pound bucket of margarine for $2!!),

but christmas is comming up, maybe I'll get some spending money then. I

think I will try propping open the trays to let some heat out. I think I'll

be experimenting today LOL.

On 12/19/05, gdawson6 <gdawson6@...> wrote:

>

> I found a giant harvestmaid dehydrator that goes from 90-145 for only

> like $7 at a thrift store. This thing has 4 trays and is over 2.5ft

> wide!

>

> You can still make crispy nuts with the dehydrator, but they will be

> enzymeless.

>

> -

--

Mrs. () Siemens

Mommy to Zack and Liddy...so far

no fear, only faith; no guilt, only grace; no pride, only praise; no claim,

only Christ

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> I do my nuts at 145 in my dehydrator. There was a discussion here a

> while back that there is a risk of mold if you dry the nuts at too

low a

> temp. Sally says to do them at 150 in NT.

Mrs. Siemens,

Try taking a thermometer reading when thedehydrator is loaded with

wet, soaked nuts and see what it says. I'm betting it will read lower

than 150.

B.

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You know what, there's not much point getting worked up over this LOL. I'll

just keep doing what I'm doing and get the Excaliber when I've saved up

enough brownie points with Dh hee hee.

Mrs. () Siemens

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,

Where do you live? Do you heat your home? You could possibly put your nuts

above a heat source (wood or gas heating stove)--on a couple of trivits. You

could keep the oven door open with a wooden spoon, and see what temperature

that is... Do you have a pilot light in your oven--you could check and see

what temperature that is... Maybe you just make your crispy nuts the way

that you did before and enjoy them. A dehydrator like I was talking about is

around $110. You might be able to find a used dehydrator with a temperature

regulator on ebay...

We live off the grid (we make our own electricity, and so the dehydrator

takes too much of our electricity to use until we have an abundance of

electricity like today. We have had a lot of rain, and our hydro is making

lots of surplus electrcity. I've got my jerky soaking in kefir, and will be

drying it tomorrow. However, I haven't been able to use it for a couple of

weeks. It will be a late Christmas gift.

JoAnn

www.wayhealthy.blogspot.com

On 12/19/05, Siemens <mandamom2many@...> wrote:

>

> Great, NOW what do I do? My oven doesn't go any lower than 200F and I

> can't

> afford another dehydrator. I love my crispy nuts ::WAHH!!!!:

>

> On 12/18/05, Lana Gibbons <lana.m.gibbons@...> wrote:

> >

> > It is definately overkill for herbs, nuts and more delicate items.

> > However, 145-165 is normal dehydrator temp for jerky as far as I know.

> >

> > -Lana

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Ontario Canada. And we have electric heat (still begging hubby for that wood

cook stove) and nothing would stay near a heater with my 2 year old LOL!!

And our stove is electric and the lightbulb doesn't warm the oven up much at

all. I think I can prop the trays open a bit and that should work. I'll

keep my eyes on the thrift store. dh doesn't trust ebay even though many of

our friends and family use it and endorse it ::sigh::

On 12/19/05, JoAnn SkyWatcher <joann.skywatcher@...> wrote:

>

> ,

>

> Where do you live? Do you heat your home? You could possibly put your nuts

> above a heat source (wood or gas heating stove)--on a couple of trivits. You

> could keep the oven door open with a wooden spoon, and see what temperature

> that is... Do you have a pilot light in your oven--you could check and see

> what temperature that is... Maybe you just make your crispy nuts the way

> that you did before and enjoy them. A dehydrator like I was talking about is

> around $110. You might be able to find a used dehydrator with a temperature

> regulator on ebay...

--

Mrs. () Siemens

Mommy to Zack and Liddy...so far

no fear, only faith; no guilt, only grace; no pride, only praise; no claim,

only Christ

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,

I guess the thrift store looks like a good option or garage sales. It would

be a good time

of year to get one--summer is when most people use them.

JoAnn

On 12/19/05, Siemens <mandamom2many@...> wrote:

>

> Ontario Canada. And we have electric heat (still begging hubby for that

> wood

> cook stove) and nothing would stay near a heater with my 2 year old LOL!!

> And our stove is electric and the lightbulb doesn't warm the oven up much

> at

> all. I think I can prop the trays open a bit and that should work. I'll

> keep my eyes on the thrift store. dh doesn't trust ebay even though many

> of

> our friends and family use it and endorse it ::sigh::

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Oh. Well. Prepare to be angry. Yes, it is too hot for SOME foods.

If all you're doing is jerky? It should be find. You need the meat to

reach an internal temp of 160 for long-term storage, etc. Anything below

that, you're risking trouble.

Any other foods such as fruit, veggies, etc., you need to stay under 145 the

first couple of hours, and then down to 120. Enzymes, through research

done by Excalibur shows that enzymes were preserved even at 145, but

anything over that were killed off. I can try to dig up the research at

Excalibur, whenI have more time later today. Or you can run over to their

site and do some digging. Or dig on Onibasu for some posts I made to the

DiscussingNT list sometime this past year.

I'm thrilled with my Excalibur. You might want to consider a trade, or

adding another one. Keep yours for jerky? Another for enzyme-packed foods?

HTH

Sharon, NH

On 12/18/05, Siemens <mandamom2many@...> wrote:

>

> I have a nesco dehydrator, it only has an on and off no temp control. I

> thought it felt aweful hot so I stuck an instant read meat thermometer in

> it

> and it said 150* F. Is this cooking the food? I love my jerky and crispy

> nuts and what not but am I defeating the purpose? Wouldn't enzymes be

> killed

> at that temperature? Or are they tough enough to be ok? HELP!!! If this is

> cooking my food I am going to be very angry, very angry indeed (doing my

> marvin the martian impersonation LOL).

>

> --

> Mrs. () Siemens

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

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>

> You know what, there's not much point getting worked up over this

LOL. I'll

> just keep doing what I'm doing and get the Excaliber when I've saved

up

> enough brownie points with Dh hee hee.

>

> Mrs. () Siemens

Are there any other reputable dehydrators besides the Excaliber? They

have some on ebay but I am not sure about the brand names. They do

have the dreaded nesco one.>

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What's so dreaded about Nesco?

Other than its plastic, I love my Nesco FD-60. It was $25 at walmart.

It has a temp dial (90-165, but runs a little hotter than the dial in

the summer) and does a lovely job of everything I've put in it.

Yeah, I know plastic is bad, but I'm still battling to get worse out

of the house... I just threw out my last Aluminum pot yesterday - the

teflon ones are next. Plastic will probably be one of the last to go

since most of it will be replaced with glass. But I love my crispy

nuts and jerky so I just grin and bear it until I can afford a nice

metal one.

-Lana

> Are there any other reputable dehydrators besides the Excaliber? They

> have some on ebay but I am not sure about the brand names. They do

> have the dreaded nesco one.>

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I also have the nesco with temperature control and am very happy with

it. There are ways around dehydrating directly on the plastic trays.

I have 3 plastic " fruit rollup trays " [optional accessory came with

one] for very wet ingredients but use parchment paper for the other

three trays when I dehydrate a bunch of food at once. The parchment

paper does a fine job. Or you could purchase the teflon sheets by

excaliber at I believe $8/ each and cut them down to fit the nesco

trays. My nesco has temp controls from 110-155 or so, bought it at

Walmart.com for $40.

I use mine to dehydrate sprouted soaked nuts, seeds and grains,

eliminates the need to soak before baking/ eating.

, if you put matchsticks between the trays of your non-temp

control nesco it would probably lower the temp below 145.

Christa

>

> What's so dreaded about Nesco?

>

> Other than its plastic, I love my Nesco FD-60. It was $25 at

walmart.

> It has a temp dial (90-165, but runs a little hotter than the dial

in

> the summer) and does a lovely job of everything I've put in it.

>

> Yeah, I know plastic is bad, but I'm still battling to get worse out

> of the house... I just threw out my last Aluminum pot yesterday -

the

> teflon ones are next. Plastic will probably be one of the last to

go

> since most of it will be replaced with glass. But I love my crispy

> nuts and jerky so I just grin and bear it until I can afford a nice

> metal one.

>

> -Lana

>

> > Are there any other reputable dehydrators besides the Excaliber?

They

> > have some on ebay but I am not sure about the brand names. They

do

> > have the dreaded nesco one.>

>

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Not all plastic is that bad. I don't know what plastic the Nesco is

made out of but I have a harvestmaid one that is the same design and

plastic. I think it may be #2 HDPE. As long you keep the temps under

120F, I can't see any issue whatsoever.

The only plastics that should cause major concern right now are

PVC(#3), Polystyrene (styrofoam, #6), and PolyCarbonate(#7)

I'm fairly certain using teflon sheets instead would actually be more

dangerous.

Ideally, a stainless steel dehydrator would be the best, but I am very

picky about what let my food come in contact with and I have no

problem at all drying nuts in my plastic dehydrator. I might get a

little more paranoid if I was drying something such as meat though.

-

> >

> > What's so dreaded about Nesco?

> >

> > Other than its plastic, I love my Nesco FD-60. It was $25 at

> walmart.

> > It has a temp dial (90-165, but runs a little hotter than the dial

> in

> > the summer) and does a lovely job of everything I've put in it.

> >

> > Yeah, I know plastic is bad, but I'm still battling to get worse out

> > of the house... I just threw out my last Aluminum pot yesterday -

> the

> > teflon ones are next. Plastic will probably be one of the last to

> go

> > since most of it will be replaced with glass. But I love my crispy

> > nuts and jerky so I just grin and bear it until I can afford a nice

> > metal one.

> >

> > -Lana

> >

> > > Are there any other reputable dehydrators besides the Excaliber?

> They

> > > have some on ebay but I am not sure about the brand names. They

> do

> > > have the dreaded nesco one.>

> >

>

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> Are there any other reputable dehydrators besides the Excaliber? They

> have some on ebay but I am not sure about the brand names. They do

> have the dreaded nesco one.>

I have three Excaliburs. Two are the small, black model with four

trays. I don't care for them much because they seem flimsy but they

do get the job done. The one I've used most is cracking in two places

on the housing and a chunk fell off the bottom last week.

I told you I was hardcore.

B.

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I have the nesco gardenmaster and LOVE it. It is huge and has a great

temperature control. It goes down to 95 degrees.

I use it atleast once a week. I got mine at a thrift store for $10.

Are there any other reputable dehydrators besides the Excaliber? They

have some on ebay but I am not sure about the brand names. They do

have the dreaded nesco one.>

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