BACKPACKING FOOD

Like many new backpackers we ate Mountain House freeze dried meals when we were on the trail.

Leann got tired of these meals after our first week long trip and started looking for better options. She is a good cook and after doing some research she decided to make her own dehydrated foods. Next step was finding the right dehydrator. Reviews were unanimous that Excalbur was the one to buy.

https://excaliburdehydrator.com/

Dehydrating process:

A dehydrator has trays, heating element, vents, and a fan for circulation. The dehydrator’s heating element raises the temperature inside the machine, the fan evenly circulates the heat and removes the moisture, while the trays hold the food you wish to dehydrate. Dehydrating food is an ancient process that goes back to approx. 12,000 BC. Standard dehydrated food generally has about 80-90% of its moisture removed.

Leann started out with a five tray dehydrator and then added the nine tray. She can really crank out the meals. The house smells awesome when she is in backpack cooking mode.
Leann says I am anal but she weighs each meal and provides the exact calorie county. I mean exact! This is my dinner (Sierra Spaghetti) from a recent backpacking trip and is one of my favorites.

SHE SAVED US A SMALL FORTUNE AND WE ATE BETTER!

Once she got really good with dehydrating she wanted to try freeze drying since this is how most of the commercial companies process food. Freeze drying preserves 97% of the foods nutritional value and still maintains taste and texture. Freeze dried foods also have more than double the shelf life of dehydrated foods. Dehydrated food should be stored in a freezer for long term use, this is not needed with freeze dried food. Major obstacle: nobody was making home freeze dryers until Harvest Right launched their product to market.

https://harvestright.com/

Freeze drying process:

Food is subjected to extremely low temperatures (-40F or colder) until frozen. Once frozen, a vacuum is formed around the food, and then the temperature is slowly raised. Heat causes the frozen food to release water vapors without going through the liquid stage (sublimation). Freeze drying removes 98-99% of the product’s moisture

The first thing she tried was pulled pork. I almost cried when I tasted it. It was awesome, what’s next?

Hamburger, it is crazy how light they are.
Mixed berries, cream of mushroom soup, cheddar cheese soup
tomato soup, soup is great way to start a meal in the wilderness
The set up comes with these mylar bags and a tool to seal them with. Just add the finished food, desiccant and then seal. Storage life of these is 50 years and no freezer needed.

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