This year I have decided to focus more on dehydrating instead of canning. I have learned that dehydrating tomatoes instead of canning them is better (for me anyway) in many ways. Let me list some of them.
- It takes up a LOT less space in the pantry (one quart jar of dehydrated tomato powder holds well over 20 pounds of tomatoes, maybe 25-30 pounds)
- It is more shelf-stable if done properly
- No heavy pots or hot jars to maneuver around
- It takes much less prep and work time; most of the process is simply waiting for them to dehydrate
- It does not heat up the house or put a bunch of extra humidity into the air
- It's easier to use (in my opinion)
- It can be done a little each day
The process is simple. The photo above has the steps in order:
- Slice the fresh, ripe tomatoes 1/4" thick (I used my nifty Borner V-Slicer Mandoline purchased from Amazon - LOVE IT!)
- Place onto the dehydrator tray, do not overlap. Dehydrate at 135* until dry (tomatoes will be slightly leathery but obviously dry). Some say to squish out the seeds and juicy middles but I say leave them in! It will take longer but why waste the nutrition these things provide? The type of tomato will have an effect on the drying time. For instance, a roma tomato (which is a paste variety) will dry much quicker than a juicy beefsteak tomato. Plan on at least 8-10 hours but probably longer for the juicy kinds ... and even longer if you leave all the seeds and juicy pulp in.
- Remove from trays and pack into a coffee grinder or blender. I found the coffee grinder worked better and I think that's because I was able to pick the grinder up and shake it while it was on. If you use a coffee grinder you will have to grind in batches.
- Funnel the powder into a mason jar. When it is full, add a 100cc oxygen absorber and vacuum seal it with a Food Saver mason-jar attachment. Add the jar ring.
- Write the date and the jar number. Store in your pantry.
To make tomato sauce, whisk a few tablespoons of powder with a cup of water (or paste - use half the water). Now with that you can make so many things ... add basil, garlic powder, onion powder, salt and a little sugar for spaghetti sauce. Add oregano, onion, garlic and salt for pizza sauce. Or whatever other tomato-based sauce you like :)
You can also add this to soups, stews, homemade bread, popcorn, etc. There are so many possibilities.
Does this really work well? Is there a noticeable difference in taste when you make tomato sauce? I would really prefer this over canning too!
ReplyDeleteShari - I see I never responded!!! Sorry about that! Yes, it works well. I still have some left from last year so I just canned everything this year. It really preserves the garden-fresh flavor! I do find it harder to get the various sauces right - the seasonings I mean. It seems I have to use more sweetener to off-set the tartness of the concentrated tomato. But no complaints - I'm so thankful for the powder!
DeleteI pray you are well.