Dehydrating Apples?????
Dehydrating Apples?????
Gidday
Can anyone give me any tips about dehydrating apples.
I have been doing it successfully with apricots, peaches and tomatoes by just slicin them up and drying, but how thes the apples going brown effect things or is it just a colour thing and nothing to worry about.
Can anyone give me any tips about dehydrating apples.
I have been doing it successfully with apricots, peaches and tomatoes by just slicin them up and drying, but how thes the apples going brown effect things or is it just a colour thing and nothing to worry about.
Cheers
just a Rough Country Boy.
just a Rough Country Boy.
G'Day Jack,
I thing they need to be treated with an antioxidant, I vague memory is dissolve up some vitamin C and wash 'em over with that but I need to chack!
nev
I thing they need to be treated with an antioxidant, I vague memory is dissolve up some vitamin C and wash 'em over with that but I need to chack!
nev
Garden shed technology rules! - Muddypause
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Ahh yes, one of my dehydrating books says only do two apples at a time, and apply lemon juice!
Nev
Nev
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- Muddypause
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I'm pretty sure it is just cosmetic Jack!
Garden shed technology rules! - Muddypause
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- Thomzo
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Oh dear. I've only got an eye-level oven. Do you really think it makes a difference?wyrdwoman wrote:Why not dry them out in a low oven? They won't go brown then.

Sorry I couldn't resist that one.
I agree with Nev, I think the discolouration is only cosmetic. I have often let apples go brown when preparing them and then popped them into something where the colour doesn't matter. It doesn't seem to affect the taste.
I know that the browing is caused by oxidation of the juices on the cut surface of the fruit but I can't remember what they oxidise into. I know we have some chemists in the forum. Perhaps they can enlighten me.
Cheers
Zoe
if you dip the slices into the fizzy drink 'sprite' the citric acid stops them from going brown.
This is the same as adding lemon juice but doesn't taste as sour.
It also works for banana and is very useful for fruit salads.
Just one thing though, do not store in a metallic container as the sprite seems to react and make it taste awful. my daughter proudly brought her fruit salad home from 'home ec' class in one of those disposable foil containers and we had to sit there and eat it!
bleugh!
This is the same as adding lemon juice but doesn't taste as sour.
It also works for banana and is very useful for fruit salads.
Just one thing though, do not store in a metallic container as the sprite seems to react and make it taste awful. my daughter proudly brought her fruit salad home from 'home ec' class in one of those disposable foil containers and we had to sit there and eat it!
bleugh!
Gidday
I only started dehydrating last year and had a few things go off. So this year I am using it to shrink the fruit right down then bunging them in the freezer as this way it don't take too much freezer space.
I might try to get some citic acid and give it a go. I am not a fan of those fizzy drinks cos I dunno what the put in them.
I only started dehydrating last year and had a few things go off. So this year I am using it to shrink the fruit right down then bunging them in the freezer as this way it don't take too much freezer space.
I might try to get some citic acid and give it a go. I am not a fan of those fizzy drinks cos I dunno what the put in them.
Cheers
just a Rough Country Boy.
just a Rough Country Boy.
lemon juice will keep them white, but i never bother - it's a waste of lemons. i do dozens of large apples each year from two trees, both grown from apple cores. one has large crisp eating apples and they stay fairly white. the smaller cyder-type apple goes a rich russet brown. in my opinion that browning improves the flavour and is best allowed. i also leave the cores in - they aren't at all inconvenient.
wyverne
wyverne
- Muddypause
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yeah, you slice them about twice as thick as the commercially available ones and they thin down when they dry. they don't reconstitute all that well in cooking, but they're great just as they are, or chopped into meusli or health bars etc.
and muddypause i think you might be thinking of peach stones, which are failry toxic, and apricots can be toxic in large amounts. but i never heard of apple pips being toxic at least not in the quantities we eat them. in fact whole-foods enthusiasts recommend you eat the whole apple, core, pips and all, and i've been doing it without harm all my life.
wyverne
and muddypause i think you might be thinking of peach stones, which are failry toxic, and apricots can be toxic in large amounts. but i never heard of apple pips being toxic at least not in the quantities we eat them. in fact whole-foods enthusiasts recommend you eat the whole apple, core, pips and all, and i've been doing it without harm all my life.
wyverne