Guest guest Posted August 21, 2005 Report Share Posted August 21, 2005 Hello to all of you: I already knew, like everybody else, how sun heat was used to dry food, but I was quite ignorant of the possibilities of cooking in the sun, the so-called solar cooking. I've found this site <<http://www.solarcooking.org>> by looking at the profile of a member of this list. (Well, sometimes I do that, you know, I run into people´s profiles, because first I'm incorrigibly curious about people in general and then I'm in search of identities. There's no predatory intention on my part, you know.) I've found the idea of solar cooking very appealing, maybe because in the first place I live in a sunny country. I think Deanna in particular will like it, if she doesn't practise it already. Those who think raw is best may also consider solar cooking as an alternative. Well, I hope you'll all enjoy the site somehow. And thanks to that member for making this info available to the group. José Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 21, 2005 Report Share Posted August 21, 2005 José-, >I've found the idea of solar cooking very appealing, maybe because in >the first place I live in a sunny country. I think Deanna in >particular will like it, if she doesn't practise it already. Those >who think raw is best may also consider solar cooking as an >alternative. Well, I hope you'll all enjoy the site somehow. > >And thanks to that member for making this info available to the >group. > Isn't that a great site? Yes, I am keen on this sort of thing, though we have drug our heels making one yet. It has year round possibilities in my neck of the woods. We like the tracking one best. Have you seen the flip side? The cooling applications. Long excerpt follows between the lines. ------------------------------------ http://solarcooking.org/funnel.htm How to Use the Solar Funnel as a Refrigerator/Cooler A university student ( Winterton) and I were the first to demonstrate that the BYU Solar Funnel Cooker can be used - at night - as a refrigerator. Here is how this is done. The Solar Funnel Cooker is set-up just as you would during sun-light hours, with two exceptions: 1. The funnel is directed at the dark night sky. It should not " see " any buildings or even trees. (The thermal radiation from walls, trees, or even clouds will diminish the cooling effect.). 2. It helps to place 2 (two) bags around the jar instead of just one, with air spaces between the bags and between the inner bag and the jar. HDPE and ordinary polyethylene bags work well, since polyethylene is nearly transparent to infrared radiation, allowing it to escape into the " heat sink " of the dark sky. During the day, the sun's rays are reflected onto the cooking vessel which becomes hot quickly. At night, heat from the vessel is radiated outward, towards empty space, which is very cold indeed (a " heat sink " ). As a result, the cooking vessel now becomes a small refrigerator. We routinely achieve cooling of about 20º F (10º C) below ambient air temperature using this remarkably simple scheme. In September 1999, we placed two funnels out in the evening, with double-bagged jars inside. One jar was on a block of wood and the other was suspended in the funnel using fishing line. The temperature that evening (in Provo, Utah) was 78º F. Using a Radio Shack indoor/outdoor thermometer, a BYU student (Colter son) measured the temperature inside the funnel and outside in the open air. He found that the temperature of the air inside the funnel dropped quickly by about 15 degrees, as its heat was radiated upwards in the clear sky. That night, the minimum outdoor air temperature measured was 47.5 degrees - but the water in both jars had ICE. I invite others to try this, and please let me know if you get ice at 55 or even 60 degrees outside air temperature (minimum at night). A black PVC container may work even better than a black-painted jar, since PVC is a good infrared radiator - these matters are still being studied. I would like to see the " Funnel Refrigerator " tried in desert climates, especially where freezing temperatures are rarely reached. It should be possible in this way to cheaply make ice for Hutus in Rwanda and for aborigines in Australia, without using any electricity or other modern " tricks. " We are in effect bringing some of the cold of space to a little corner on earth. Please let me know how this works for you. ------------------------- I am also researching stirling engine applications for consumer use. I presently do software and 8051 microcontroller design and am also very interested in getting some reasonably priced designs for alternative energies with peak world oil production knocking at our door. I realize you do/did civil engineering, but surely you may remember the Carnot cycle in physics? Check this out: http://stirlingenergy.com/whatisastirlingengine.htm " Today, Stirling engines are used in some very specialized applications, like in submarines or auxiliary power generators, where quiet operation is important. Stirling engines are unique heat engines because their theoretical efficiency is nearly equal to their theoretical maximum efficiency, known as the Carnot Cycle efficiency. Stirling engines are powered by the expansion of a gas when heated, followed by the compression of the gas when cooled. The Stirling engine contains a fixed amount of gas which is transferred back and forth between a " cold " and and a " hot " end. The " displacer piston " moves the gas between the two ends and the " power piston " changes the internal volume as the gas expands and contracts. " Cheer to you, voyeur! Deanna Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 21, 2005 Report Share Posted August 21, 2005 > -----Original Message----- > From: > [mailto: ] On Behalf Of > - s Barbosa > > Those who think raw is best may also consider solar > cooking as an alternative. I wouldn't recommend it. Food heated to high temperatures is cooked, and whether the heat comes from reflected sunlight, from burning gas, or from electricity run through resistors is of little importance, nutritionally speaking. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 22, 2005 Report Share Posted August 22, 2005 Good morning: Oh, at first I was a little disappointed to read this [´s post]. It felt like cold water being poured on. Not that it was his intention. But then I woke up. In fact, it makes no sense to promote even solar cooking among rawfoodists. Even if it offers a lot of well- known advantages and benefits, it simply boils down to cooking, and usually in the mind of a rawfoodist cooking a food equals damaging a food. So, I should have known better than having suggested it in the first place. I don't know if himself is a rawfoodist. It seems he could be one, though maybe he is simply expressing his impartial opinion. But yes, I guess that for the folks on the other end, solar cooking could be a healthier option. I'm not saying this from my own experience with solar cooking (which is null for the time being), but from a few miscellaneous impressions and received information, such as: 1. cooking with firewood, as they still do in some parts of the country, makes for a tastier food. Therefore, the medium matters, at least in terms of taste. 2. microwaving cooking is practical, but probably hazardous to one's health. This has been advertised to death. 3. slow cooking (and solar cooking is slow) preserves the qualities of the food being cooked better than quicker methods. Moreover, it seems that in solar cooking, the very high temperature is not attained. Well, let's hear what the knowledgeable have to say. In any case, I apologize to the rawfoodists for my blunder. José [JC] > > Those who think raw is best may also consider solar > > cooking as an alternative. --- In , " Berg " <bberg@c...> wrote: > I wouldn't recommend it. Food heated to high temperatures is cooked, and > whether the heat comes from reflected sunlight, from burning gas, or from > electricity run through resistors is of little importance, nutritionally > speaking. > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 22, 2005 Report Share Posted August 22, 2005 > Good morning: > 1. cooking with firewood, as they still do in some parts of the > country, makes for a tastier food. Therefore, the medium matters, at > least in terms of taste. > 2. microwaving cooking is practical, but probably hazardous to > one's health. This has been advertised to death. > 3. slow cooking (and solar cooking is slow) preserves the > qualities of the food being cooked better than quicker methods. > Moreover, it seems that in solar cooking, the very high temperature > is not attained. Thx -. I had to laff a bit when I saw the post because of just that - I thot most folks in these here parts were mostly raw- foodies. 1. The thing about firewood, in some parts of the world, is that it is so scarce. African women are known to hike 25 miles a day to get it. Solar ovens were a huge benefit to these women and their families. Solar ovens can be used to pateurise water in areas where the water is dirty. The large commercial Village Oven is used in some communities as a source of income in a bakery format. One Villager Oven can bake 40 loaves of bread at once, in under an hour. Thissmall business is critical to the survival of the people. Of course, it is a whole other argument as to whether or not the wheat is any good for them - it is what they have now and people are starving. 2. Some say that microwaves destroy the DNA more thoroughly than any other form of cooking. Cooking destroys the DNA too, but not in an instant and not as thoroughly. Mcrowaves leak. I used to have a good one, and yet it still interfered with my satellite TV reception. 3. Solar ovens come to temperature all at once - in that the FOOD comes to temp all at once. There are not " hot spots " and food will never burn, creating carcinogens. Food will dry out, but rarely burn. SOME types of ovens can actually fry food so I guess never isn't the right word, but you get my drift. If I bake a cake or a bread (I know I know...) it will rise higher and fluffier because of the even heating effect. Solar cooking isn't necessarily " slower " because a 350 degree F oven is still 350 degress, but the way food is heated seems to improve nutritional recovery and certainly, flavor. Also, you don't have to build an oven, you can buy a really nice one from the good folks at SUN OVEN (not connected in any way). They cost around $250 and can be used to carry cold foods as well as cook that food, while camping. The commercial ovens are very stable and reach as well as maintain even temps. I use mine around 350 degrees F most of the time. My oven can get up to about 425 but I have no need for that temp. I am also lazy and don't want to shift the oven a few degrees every half hour or so to maintain those temps. One adjusts the temp in a solar oven by unfocusing the refelectors or skewing away from the direct line of sunlight or by maintaining a clear direct focus of sunlight onto the reflectors. For me, my solar ovens are a life saver. I live in a tiny cement box in the desert and it is VERY DIFFICULT for my house to stay cool. It is always 81+ degrees inside and in the summer, to cook inside is suicide. I can cook outside, for free and it tastes great. Admittedly I am not cooking so much anymore tho <G> Cheers, *S* Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 22, 2005 Report Share Posted August 22, 2005 , > >I wouldn't recommend it. Food heated to high temperatures is cooked, and >whether the heat comes from reflected sunlight, from burning gas, or from >electricity run through resistors is of little importance, nutritionally >speaking. > But what about sun dried meat and fruits? That's a method that's worked forever. UV rays do kill off a lot of stuff. But then, when I was eating a high raw vegan diet, I would get food poisoning every so often. Some things are better cooked, and we have been cooking for a long long time. Right now I could put food out on the patio (covered on two sides by brick house) and it would cook to high temperatures with the sun in no time flat. Deanna Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 22, 2005 Report Share Posted August 22, 2005 Hi Sue: Thanks for the considerations on solar cooking. You know, at the risk of incurring a little digression, I'd like to ask you to focus on this, I mean, on the destruction of the DNA by cooking. How serious is that? How to minimize the evil? Can't the benefits of *wise* cooking outweigh the DNA destruction? In your opinion, can the human being re-adapt to an all-raw food diet permanently and not miss the stimuli of cooking and not feel alien to his cultural entourage, so to say? To what extent has cooking given man the face he shows or the cortex he uses? I'm not expecting an easy answer. > 2. Some say that microwaves destroy the DNA more thoroughly than any > other form of cooking. Cooking destroys the DNA too, but not in an > instant and not as thoroughly.... > *S* Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 22, 2005 Report Share Posted August 22, 2005 > > >But what about sun dried meat and fruits? That's a method that's worked >forever. UV rays do kill off a lot of stuff. But then, when I was >eating a high raw vegan diet, I would get food poisoning every so >often. Deanna: I would dearly love to have a solar food dryer! There was one for sale on the net for making biltong. It rains a lot here, and the flies get all over what you are drying anyway, so a box, open to UV but not to flies or rain, makes a lot of sense! Also I love low heat cooking, but it takes a lot of fuel (electric or propane, either one). Cooking with the sun just makes sense. I'm not sure it would work here for much of the year, but in the summer our car gets hot enough I'd guess it would cook ... -- Heidi Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 22, 2005 Report Share Posted August 22, 2005 Heidi, >Also I love low heat cooking, but it takes a lot of fuel (electric >or propane, either one). Cooking with the sun just makes sense. >I'm not sure it would work here for much of the year, but in the >summer our car gets hot enough I'd guess it would cook ... > Yeah, the great north wet. But you might try that ... Yes, I can see it now! Heidi's Car Cooker - It costs too much to drive, so hang some meat, roll up the windows, and listen to some Elvis ROFL! I can't wait until you produce the pdf with photos of *that* operation. Deanna Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 22, 2005 Report Share Posted August 22, 2005 Deanna: >Heidi's Car Cooker >- It costs too much to drive, so hang some meat, roll up the windows, >and listen to some Elvis Great use for all those gas guzzlers when the gas gets too pricy! -- Heidi Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 22, 2005 Report Share Posted August 22, 2005 > Heidi's Car Cooker What?! You've never seen Manifold Destiny?? http://www.thenewhomemaker.com/manifolddestiny Lynn S. ------ Lynn Siprelle * web developer, writer, mama, fiber junky http://www.siprelle.com * http://www.thenewhomemaker.com http://www.deanspeaksforme.com * http://www.knitting911.net Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 22, 2005 Report Share Posted August 22, 2005 Lynn, >>Heidi's Car Cooker >> >> > >What?! You've never seen Manifold Destiny?? > Nope. But my we are ripe for some of that! Hee hee. Deanna Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 23, 2005 Report Share Posted August 23, 2005 > -----Original Message----- > From: > [mailto: ] On Behalf Of Deanna Wagner > > , > >I wouldn't recommend it. Food heated to high temperatures is cooked, > >and whether the heat comes from reflected sunlight, from > burning gas, > >or from electricity run through resistors is of little importance, > >nutritionally speaking. > > > But what about sun dried meat and fruits? That's a method > that's worked forever. UV rays do kill off a lot of stuff. Well...that's drying, not cooking. The food is heated enough to speed up evaporation, but (presumably) not enough to cause the protein denaturation that characterizes cooking. I'm not sure what you mean about UV rays killing a lot of stuff. You mean nutrients, or pathogens? Actually, even if I did know what you meant, I don't know enough to make an informed comment on either topic. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 23, 2005 Report Share Posted August 23, 2005 : May I ask you: are you a rawfoodist? Or at least a raw foods enthusiast? If you've been following an all-raw diet for some time, can you tell what improvements you have noticed in your health since then? And what main difficulties have you experienced? Can you elaborate on the protein denaturation so many rawfoodists are talking about? Thanks. JC > > -----Original Message----- > > From: > > [mailto: ] On Behalf Of Deanna Wagner > > > > , > > >I wouldn't recommend it. Food heated to high temperatures is cooked, > > >and whether the heat comes from reflected sunlight, from > > burning gas, > > >or from electricity run through resistors is of little importance, > > >nutritionally speaking. > > > > > But what about sun dried meat and fruits? That's a method > > that's worked forever. UV rays do kill off a lot of stuff. > > Well...that's drying, not cooking. The food is heated enough to speed up > evaporation, but (presumably) not enough to cause the protein denaturation > that characterizes cooking. I'm not sure what you mean about UV rays killing > a lot of stuff. You mean nutrients, or pathogens? Actually, even if I did > know what you meant, I don't know enough to make an informed comment on > either topic. > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 23, 2005 Report Share Posted August 23, 2005 , >Well...that's drying, not cooking. The food is heated enough to speed up >evaporation, but (presumably) not enough to cause the protein denaturation >that characterizes cooking. I'm not sure what you mean about UV rays killing >a lot of stuff. You mean nutrients, or pathogens? Actually, even if I did >know what you meant, I don't know enough to make an informed comment on >either topic. > Yes, I guess it is more of a natural dehydration process. The good news is the nutrients are probably better preserved, especially protein as you say. UV radiation destroys/inhibits microbial growth, which in the case of hanging out meat would probably be nasty critters. You could find reference to it on the web if you wanted more information. I have been wanting to make some beef or turkey jerky in the sun, but the hassle of making a fly-proof covering has always turned me off to it. And I have cringed at the thought of doing it in batches in my little Excalibur dehydrator. Heidi's car idea is actually pretty ideal. I have a Park Avenue and an old Subaru wagon. When I try it this weekend, it will be in the latter and I'll make sure I take pictures of the whole affair. Why not? All I have to do is point the back window towards the sun and rig some sort of hanging mechanism for the meat. I'll partition the wagon off from the seats with a sunshade. I won't seal it up or anything, as I will want venting. The windows I'll leave cracked or fully opened with a screen partition for pest control. Maybe I'll run a small fan from the cigarette lighter or something. I'll make sure the car is good and clean first. Today we'll put the temperature sensor in and see what we get under various conditions. It should be 100 outside for the next several days. Maybe I'll even jack it up in the rear some for a better angle to the sun. What fun! Please send in comments and suggestions y'all Since I have never made jerky yet, I don't know the lowdown. Some questions. 1. I have frozen pastured, organic beef in various cuts. I have big roasts and round steaks that are all pounded and thinly sliced (Swiss steaks?). Does it matter which cut I use in terms of possible pathogens? Is having it frozen for several weeks and marinating it in lf liquid or wine of some sort for a day or two enough basically? 2. My Excalibur says 145 degrees F for jerky. Heidi's Jerky file says 110 and then lower. What temperature should I go with in the sun? I can always adjust it down by ventilation. Thanks for any advice. I assume all risk, just like I do everyday in my kitchen. :-D Deanna Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 24, 2005 Report Share Posted August 24, 2005 1. I have frozen pastured, organic beef in various cuts. I have big >roasts and round steaks that are all pounded and thinly sliced (Swiss >steaks?). Does it matter which cut I use in terms of possible >pathogens? Is having it frozen for several weeks and marinating it in >lf liquid or wine of some sort for a day or two enough basically? I handle the pathogen issue by marinating it in kefir or kimchi juice (see the writup under " Jerky " in the files section). Both kefir and kimchi are highly anti-bad-bacteria and I think kefir was used experimentally on beef carcasses to kill e-coli. They also tenderize the meat nicely! I mix them with garlic granules, salt, pepper, and marinate for a day or a week until I get around to drying. (but you seem to have read the writup so you know that already ... ) The spices used for, say, biltong, were part of what killed the pathogens. I learned this from a person who grew up on biltong in S. Africa, who is now a doctor. They rolled the meat in salt and coriander, which is probably enough to kill the nasties, and hung it in their garage (so, no sun!). They ignored the fact flies landed on it. Some studies have been done on jerky though, and dipping it in hot vinegar is enough to kill any surface nasties too. There is a writup on this on the web somewhere. I use the round roasts from our beef, because they are easy to slice and don't have gristle. I don't mind gristle and fat, but they gross out some in my " audience " . Also round roasts aren't very interesting for anything else. >2. My Excalibur says 145 degrees F for jerky. Heidi's Jerky file says >110 and then lower. What temperature should I go with in the sun? I >can always adjust it down by ventilation. The temp matters mainly for *time* ... how long do you want to wait? Ventilation is important too though. One problem with the car idea is that if the moist air doesn't leave fast enough, it will just sit there in moist air, which isn't good at all (it would probably mold eventually). -- Heidi Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 24, 2005 Report Share Posted August 24, 2005 Hi , I don't know. For me, cooking is as much a hobby/fun thing to do as it is something I do to survive. I suspect people can get by just fine doing only raw, but what's the fun in that? Personally, I believe that the preparation and presentation of food has as much to do with health as the food itself. It's an energy thing, it is love. Near the end of every month as I have less funds available to me, I don't eat as well as I do in the beginning of the month, and I feel worse for it. Interestingly, I eat more cold and raw at the end of the month, probably less protein. I just finished making my second batch of yogurt - what fun. Can't wait for my kefir grains to finish re-hydrating. Maybe this weekend I will have fresh kefir to try. I wouldn't have bothered, except for this group and the price of organic yogurt. I was taking antibiotics and needed to replenish the good bugs. It really worked. Cheers, *S* > Hi Sue: > > Thanks for the considerations on solar cooking. You know, at the risk > of incurring a little digression, I'd like to ask you to focus on > this, I mean, on the destruction of the DNA by cooking. How serious > is that? How to minimize the evil? Can't the benefits of *wise* > cooking outweigh the DNA destruction? > > In your opinion, can the human being re-adapt to an all-raw food diet > permanently and not miss the stimuli of cooking and not feel alien to > his cultural entourage, so to say? > > To what extent has cooking given man the face he shows or the cortex > he uses? > > I'm not expecting an easy answer. > > > > > > 2. Some say that microwaves destroy the DNA more thoroughly than > any > > other form of cooking. Cooking destroys the DNA too, but not in an > > instant and not as thoroughly.... > > *S* Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 24, 2005 Report Share Posted August 24, 2005 Hi, I have a solar dehydrator. It is 5 or 6 trays with a zippered mesh " box " around it. Keeps bugs out great. Here in the desert tho, things tend to cook no matter what. And, BTW, you can use a solar oven anywhere anytime there is a few hours of sunshine. I have photos of people cooking with them, while the oven is perched in a snowbank. The temps stll get to over 250 degrees. *S* > > > > > >But what about sun dried meat and fruits? That's a method that's worked > >forever. UV rays do kill off a lot of stuff. But then, when I was > >eating a high raw vegan diet, I would get food poisoning every so > >often. > > Deanna: > > I would dearly love to have a solar food dryer! There was > one for sale on the net for making biltong. It rains a lot > here, and the flies get all over what you are drying anyway, > so a box, open to UV but not to flies or rain, makes a lot of > sense! > > Also I love low heat cooking, but it takes a lot of fuel (electric > or propane, either one). Cooking with the sun just makes sense. > I'm not sure it would work here for much of the year, but in the > summer our car gets hot enough I'd guess it would cook ... > > -- Heidi Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 25, 2005 Report Share Posted August 25, 2005 Dear Sue, Well, that was all very empathic to read. I agree with everything. Thank you. Now I would like to say something about eating all raw. Actually, I would compare eating all raw to climbing the Everest. Both are ultimate experiences. But what is left for you to do afterwards? Nothing worth your while or effort, it seems. That's why an all-raw diet can be counterproductive. It leaves you with no more options. For someone who has climbed the Everest, all the other peaks look like hills. He may well want to retire or even die, because life won't offer him any more challenges, will it? Besides, who can stay on that top all the time? Unless you're prepared to endure the cold and the isolation, you'll have to come down one day. So, maybe an all-raw diet is good for the short term, but not for life. Some rawfoodists claim that cooking takes a lot of time. Indeed, it does, but that's where your intelligence can play a role: there are many ways of turning cooking into fun, aren't there? And I wonder what rawfoodists do make of their increased amount of free time. Are they able to use it in meditation, working out, growing food, reading books, etc? If that's the case, then I'll take my hat off to them. But I'm afraid it isn't always like that. I don't think they all know what to do with their lengthy free time. Perhaps some of them will just fold their arms and keep on watching other people ... cook – to pass the time. On the other hand, some rawfoodists may go on complaining they still don't have the time, all the time they need. It would be better for the latter to stop eating altogether, don`t you think so? PS. It goes without saying, but I will say it anyway - Nothing of what I wrote above aims at criticizing other people`s choices. It`s just my partial and personal way of looking at radical rawfoodism. > > Hi Sue: > > > > Thanks for the considerations on solar cooking. You know, at the > risk > > of incurring a little digression, I'd like to ask you to focus on > > this, I mean, on the destruction of the DNA by cooking. How > serious > > is that? How to minimize the evil? Can't the benefits of *wise* > > cooking outweigh the DNA destruction? > > > > In your opinion, can the human being re-adapt to an all-raw food > diet > > permanently and not miss the stimuli of cooking and not feel alien > to > > his cultural entourage, so to say? > > > > To what extent has cooking given man the face he shows or the > cortex > > he uses? > > > > I'm not expecting an easy answer. > > > > > > > > > > > 2. Some say that microwaves destroy the DNA more thoroughly than > > any > > > other form of cooking. Cooking destroys the DNA too, but not in > an > > > instant and not as thoroughly.... > > > *S* Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 28, 2005 Report Share Posted August 28, 2005 Heidi, >>2. My Excalibur says 145 degrees F for jerky. Heidi's Jerky file says >>110 and then lower. What temperature should I go with in the sun? I >>can always adjust it down by ventilation. >> >> >The temp matters mainly for *time* ... how long do you want to wait? >Ventilation is important too though. One problem with the car idea is >that if the moist air doesn't leave fast enough, it will just sit there in >moist air, which isn't good at all (it would probably mold eventually). > Thank you for your assistance. Well, I was planning to have screens up on open windows and the open hatch for bug control, and run a fan inside. That would have made it more of a traditional sun dried meat. But alas, rain threatens, and if I don't take the meat out of the probiotic marinade today, it will turn to mush. Excalibur to the rescue! I am going to try the car cooker this autumn, because I will have so much meat to contend with very soon and ds has his heart set on it. Deanna Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 28, 2005 Report Share Posted August 28, 2005 Deanna Wagner wrote: > > Thank you for your assistance. Well, I was planning to have screens up > on open windows and the open hatch for bug control, and run a fan > inside. That would have made it more of a traditional sun dried meat. > But alas, rain threatens, and if I don't take the meat out of the > probiotic marinade today, it will turn to mush. Excalibur to the > rescue! I am going to try the car cooker this autumn, because I will > have so much meat to contend with very soon and ds has his heart set > on it. Do let me know how it comes out! Maybe we'll start a new trend ... -- Heidi Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 28, 2005 Report Share Posted August 28, 2005 Heidi, > > Do let me know how it comes out! Maybe we'll start a >new trend ... > Your jerky technique rocks! I marinated the beef roast strips in kefir, kimchi and pickle juice, lol. Can't have too much of a good thing. Oh, and extra garlic slices, salt and pepper. I had to use the conventional dehydrator this time, darn. It turned out fabulous, just like regular beef jerky, only better. It is my latest adventure in NT land! Now, as I said, I have mucho meat now, and my regular order is coming mid September. You see, my egg guy sold me an older pastured lamb (64 lbs!) for a very reasonable price this weekend. It's very good and not tough <whew>. So I will want to experiment some more with the jerky using lamb (no problems there, correct?). I was thinking a teriyaki version a la NT's salmon jerky would be nice. What do ya think? My dehydrator manual talks about brine curing the meat. I remember that changes the protein or something. Also, isn't a vinegar base just as good for killing the unlikely pathogens that might be present. Forgive the choppy ramblings here, but I will be needing to store some meat besides my little freezer quite soon. I can't see that the jerky will last long anyhow - it's a great hit with the whole clan! For the sun drying method: I may rig up the drying set up in Tom Brown's _Wilderness Survival Field Guide_ , only cover the whole thing with netting of some sort. I'll have to looking into that. Oh, dh says that Harbor Freight Tools sells deli meat slicers on occasion. That's his favorite place to shop. :-) http://www.harborfreightusa.com/usa/common/start.do Bon appetite! Deanna Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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